Stochastic Resonance in the Motor System: Effects of Noise on the Monosynaptic Reflex Pathway of the Cat Spinal Cord

Martínez, L; Perez, T.; Mirasso, C; Manjarrez, E.
Journal of Neurophysiology 97, 4007-4016 (2007)

In sensory systems the presence of a particular non-zero level of noise may significantly
enhance the ability of an individual to detect weak sensory stimuli through a
phenomenon known as stochastic resonance (SR). The aim of this study was to
demonstrate if such phenomenon is also exhibited by the motor system; in particular, in
the Ia-motoneuron synapse of the cat spinal cord. Monosynaptic reflexes elicited by
periodic electrical stimulation to the medial gastrocnemius nerve were recorded in the
L7 ventral root (or in single motoneurons) of decerebrated cats. Random stretches
(mechanical noise) were applied to the lateral gastrocnemius plus soleus muscle by
means of a closed-loop mechanical stimulator-transducer. In all cats we observed the
SR phenomenon. The amplitude of the monosynaptic reflexes (or number of action
potentials recorded in the motoneurons) evoked by the weak electrical stimuli applied to
the medial gastrocnemius nerve were an inverted U-like function of the mechanical
noise applied to the lateral gastrocnemius plus soleus muscle. A significant maximum
value in the amplitude of the monosynaptic responses was reached with a particular
noise amplitude value. Numerical simulations on a model of the monosynaptic reflex
pathway qualitatively reproduce this stochastic resonance behavior. We conclude that
the monosynaptic reflex response elicited by Ia afferents is optimized by the noisy
stretching of a synergistic muscle. Our study provides the first direct demonstration that
the motor system, and not only the sensory systems, exhibits the SR phenomenon.


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