“…* Studies on the activity of single hippocampal neurones in response to sensory stimulation or during motor behaviour have been published from nine laboratories (Brown and Buchwald 1973, Feder and Ranck 1973, Green and Machne 1955, Lidsky, Levine, and MacGregor 1974a,b, Molnar and Arutyunov 1969, O'Keefe 1976, O'Keefe and Dostrovsky 1971, Ranck 1973, Segal 1974, Vinogradova 1970, Vinogradova, Semyonova, and Konovalov 1970, Yokota, Reeves, and MacLean 1970. * * Most of these studies report that sensory stimuli have a non-specific arousing effect on hippocampal neurones, usually of rather long latency ( > 100 ms.) Evidence for more specific sensory responses has been reported in four studies (Brown and Buchwald 1973, Green and Machne 1955, Molnar and Arutyunov 1969, Segal 1974). In the first of these, Green and Machne (1955) found that while many hippocampal units in the paralysed, unanaesthetized rabbit were multi-modal, activated by all the sensory stimuli that they tried, others could only be excited by one stimulus such as a touch on a particular part of the body and not by visual or auditory stimuli.…”