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J Neurophysiol (December 24, 2008). doi:10.1152/jn.90655.2008
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Submitted on June 10, 2008
Revised on December 15, 2008
Accepted on December 17, 2008

WHISKING IN AIR: ENCODING OF KINEMATICS BY TRIGEMINAL GANGLION NEURONS IN AWAKE RATS

Vivek Khatri1*, Roberto Bermejo, Joshua C Brumberg2, Asaf Keller3, and H. Philip Zeigler4

1 Vanderbilt University
2 Queens College
3 Univ. of Maryland School of Medicine, Program in Neuroscience
4 Hunter College, CUNY

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: vivek.khatri{at}vanderbilt.edu.

Active sensing requires the brain to distinguish signals produced by external inputs from those generated by the animal's own movements. Since the rodent whisker musculature lacks proprioceptors, we asked whether trigeminal ganglion neurons encode the kinematics of the rat's own whisker movements in air. By examining the role of kinematics, we have extended previous findings showing that many neurons that respond during such movements do not do so consistently. Nevertheless, the majority (~70%) of trigeminal ganglion neurons display significant correlations between firing rate and a kinematic parameter, and a subset, ~30%, represent kinematics with high reliability. Preferential firing to movement direction was observed but was strongly modulated by movement amplitude and speed. However, in contrast to the precise time-locking that occurs in response to active whisker contacts, whisker movements in air generate temporally dispersed responses that are not time-locked to the onset of either protractions or retractions.







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