Abstract
The electric potential difference (1 to 15 mv.) between two loci of the slime mold connected with a strand of protoplasm changes rhythmically with the same period (60 to 180 seconds) as that of the back and forth protoplasmic streaming along the strand. Generally some phase difference is observed between them. Periods of the electric potential rhythm show a Gaussian distribution. Amplitudes give a somewhat different distribution curve. Wave forms are not always simple harmonic ones, but are distorted more or less. However, auto-correlation analysis proves that there is a dominant rhythm of a nearly constant period which coincides with the mean period of the Gaussian distribution curve. Calculations made on an assumption that the electric potential rhythm is the result of many elementary rhythms (i.e., same periodicity, arbitrary phase angles) distributed throughout the plasmodium, give a satisfactory coincidence with the observed distribution for the amplitude. The predominance of a rhythm of a nearly constant periodicity suggests the existence of well organized interactions among components of a contractile protein network, the rhythmic deformation of which is supposed to be responsible for the protoplasmic streaming and for the electric potential rhythm.