Volume 17, Number 5,
Issue of March 1, 1997
pp. 1761-1768
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Representation of Accurate Temporal Information in the
Electrosensory System of the African Electric Fish,
Gymnarchus niloticus
Received Sept. 30, 1996; revised Nov. 12, 1996; accepted Dec. 9, 1996.
Yuan-Xing Guo and
Masashi Kawasaki
Department of Biology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville,
Virginia 22903
Differential-phase-sensitive neurons in the electrosensory lateral
line lobe (ELL) of the African electric fish, Gymnarchus niloticus, are sensitive to time disparities on the order of
microseconds between afferent action potentials. These action
potentials fire in a phase-locked manner in response to the animal's
own wave-type electric organ discharges (EODs) (). The time disparity is one of the essential cues for an
electrical behavior, the jamming avoidance response (JAR). To gain an
insight into the accurate temporal processing in the ELL, firing time accuracy and dynamic response properties of action potentials of the
phase-locked neurons (PLNs) in the ELL were examined. The temporal
accuracy of the entire neuronal circuit for the JAR was also measured
using behavioral responses.
Standard deviation of firing times of PLNs' action potentials was ~6
µsec. The PLNs represent zerocrossing times of each stimulus cycle
with this accuracy even when stimulus phase was modulated at high
frequencies (~50 Hz). Distinct JAR occurred when time disparity was
diminished below 1 µsec, and a marginal JAR could still be detected
with a time disparity of 100 nsec. Standard deviation of the firing
times of EODs was approximately several hundred nanoseconds. This
stability of the EOD, however, was demonstrated to be unnecessary for
the JAR. JARs occurred even when a large artificial jitter (~60
µsec) was introduced to a stimulus that mimicked fish's own EOD and
the time disparity for JAR was diminished to 1 µsec. This immunity of
JAR to the EOD jitter is explained by the insensitivity of the
differential-phase-sensitive neurons in the ELL to a common phase
modulation.
The JAR of the South American electric fish, Eigenmannia,
also occurs in response to stimuli that generate comparably small phase
differences (; ). The
present study revealed that the independently evolved Eigenmannia and Gymnarchus exhibit a comparative
level of remarkable temporal accuracy.
Key words:
phase;
phase-locked neurons;
electric fish;
jamming
avoidance response;
phase comparison;
binaural comparison;
convergent
evolution;
adaptation;
vector strength