Gamma band activity in whole cell recorded pedunculopontine nucleus (PPN) cells. A: increasing steps of current (increase of 30 pA per step, each step was 500 ms in duration, 2.5 s latency between each step, and the record was truncated between current steps and spliced to show only the current steps) caused cells to fire action potentials at higher frequencies. This cell fired maximally at 54 Hz, which is within the gamma frequency range. B: graph showing the average firing frequency of the 50 recorded cells at the beginning (black), middle (red), and end (green) of each current step. The average maximal firing frequency was at the 180 pA current step when cells fired at the average rate of 50 ± 2 Hz at the beginning of the current step. Cell firing frequency then decreased during the middle and end of the current step, and there was no significant difference between the firing rate during the middle and end of the stimulus (ns, P > 0.05). Significant compared with baseline is represented by an asterisk when P < 0.05, double asterisk when P < 0.01, and triple asterisk when P < 0.0001. C: graph showing the average firing frequency of each cell type at the beginning, middle, and end of the 180 pA current step. At the beginning of the current step, type I neurons (n = 17) fired significantly faster than type II (n = 16) or III (n = 16) cells (asterisk, P < 0.05), but type II and III neurons did not fire significantly faster than one another (ns, P > 0.05). Furthermore, there was no significant difference between the firing frequencies of the 3 cells types during the middle and end of the current step (ns, P > 0.05).