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In July 1989 a symposium was held at the Physiology Department of
the Georg August University, G6ttingen, on the physiological,
biophysical, biochemical, and technical principles of the coding of
chemical substances both in nervous systems and artificial devices.
This book is the collection of the papers presented at that
meeting. Biological and artificial systems for odor coding both
have in common that the stimulus selectivity of the receptor cells
(sensors) is usually very poor, and the mechanisms which determine
selectivity and sensitivity are largely unknown. However, a poor
selectivity allows the coding of an enormous number of stimuli by
combinations of receptor activities. In the field of chemosensory
information coding there are thus two major problems: the function
of the receptors and the network that processes and evaluates the
primary information of the sensors. Accordingly, this volume has
three parts: sensors, the network following the sensors, and the
coding in this network. The expert secretarial assistance of M.
Holtmann in preparing the camera-ready manuscript is gratefully
acknowledged. D. Schild G6ttingen, August 1989 CONTENTS l. Response
of olfactory receptor cells, isolated and in situ, to low
concentrations of odorants 1 Stephan Frings, Bernd Lindemann 2.
Excitation and adaptation of frog olfactory receptor neurones upon
stimulation with second messengers and natural odorants 9 D.
Schild, J. A. DeSimone, S. Hellwig 3. Receptor selectivity and
dimensionality of odours at the stage of the olfactory receptor
cells 21 GiJJes Sicard 4.
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