
doi: 10.1007/bf01063048
Experiments on the isolated ganglionic ring of the freshwater molluskPlanorbis corneus showed that more neurons (30%) in the ipsilateral mesocerebrum respond to stimulation of the left cerebral nerves than to stimulation of the opposite nerves (13%). A similar picture is observed for neurons of the right mesocerebrum, except that 11% of neurons respond to activation of the left cerebral nerves compared with 39% to stimulation of the ipsilateral right cerebral nerves. Ipsilateral connections of nerve of the visceral complex of ganglia are more clearly defined, as is exemplified by the left pallial nerve, during stimulation of which 68% of neurons in the ipsilateral mesocerebrum were activated, compared with 8% in the contralateral right mesocerebrum. Afferent fibers running in the visceral nerves cross at the level of the abdominal ganglion and not of the cerebral commissure, as might be expected from the structure of the ganglionic ring. The mesocerebral neurons themselves do not form synaptic connections between the mesocerebra, and excitation reaching one of them does not therefore induce any effects in the other.
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