Octopus cells fire in response to the coincident activation of many, but not necessarily all, of the auditory nerve fibers by which they are innervated. Seven superimposed responses are shown to shocks of the auditory nerve of 0.1-msec duration and of varying strength (1–10 V) delivered through a pair of tungsten electrodes. Responses were recorded with a sharp microelectrode filled with 4 M potassium acetate from an octopus cell in a parasagittal slice from the cochlear nucleus of a mouse. The extracellular saline was saturated with 95% oxygen/5% carbon dioxide and contained 130 mM NaCl, 3 mM KCl, 1.3 mM MgSO4, 2.4 mM CaCl2, 20 mM NaHCO3, 3 mM Hepes, 10 mM glucose, 1.2 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.4. Shocks produced artifacts that serve as markers of their occurrence and whose removal left a blank space in the traces. The amplitude of responses was a monotonic function of the shock strength with the weakest shocks producing the smallest responses and the strongest shocks producing the largest responses. The appearance of a small action potential, whose inflection point is marked with an arrowhead, shows where the response was just large and rapid enough to cause firing in the octopus cell. In larger responses the action potential and synaptic potential cannot be resolved. The recording was made by N. L. Golding (19).