Yonsei Med J.  1965 Dec;6(1):11-15. 10.3349/ymj.1965.6.1.11.

The Physiological Significance of Natural Mechanical Stimulus in the Field of Cerebrospinal Nervous System

Affiliations
  • 1Jeseng Hospital, 326 Choryang Dong, Pusan, Korea.

Abstract

Full evidence and obvious reasons made it possible to arrive at the conclusion that the nature of transmission upon cerebrospinal neurons is overwhelmingly mechanical, not only in the periphery- between various receptors and afferent nerve terminals, and between surrounding tissues and free nerve endings- but also in the cerebral cortex. When viewed from the standpoint of the everchanging patterns of natural mechanical stimuli, the neurons in the conscious cerebral cortex and the pain endings in an acute inflammatory locus have the same situation very much in common. It is quite likely that natural mechanical stimuli dominate over cerebrospinal nervous phenomena and physiologists have been watching the missing mechanism at work in every experiment upon afferent nerve terminals and cerebral cortex that they have done. The terms "psychic tension" and "central excitatory state" comparable to muscular tonus are of interest because they involve the use of mathematical techniques in psychology and neurophysiology. They are capable of becoming weak or strong, and they serve as an inner stimulus to give impetus to behavior. Unfortunately, however, it is an elusive inner stimulus, and it defies a lucid definition. But natural mechanical stimuli embody the psychic tension and the central excitatory state ultimately. It seems now that we just found a place where constant complaints against neurophysiology and physiological psychology are ventilated. We may conclude that natural mechanical stimuli are the leading direct stimuli to cerebrospinal neurons in the human body, and the plastic and developmental nervous phenomena and mental phenomena can be explained objectively by a familliar datum of mechanical energy and that we can reasonably expect the day of regarding material world and spiritual world in the monistic conception of matter-energy system.


MeSH Terms

Animals
Anura
Cerebral Cortex/*physiology
Human
In Vitro
Motor Neurons/physiology
Nerve Endings/physiology
Receptors, Sensory/*physiology
Spinal Cord/*physiology
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