2008
DOI: 10.1002/cne.21613
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Connections of cat auditory cortex: III. Corticocortical system

Abstract: The mammalian auditory cortex (AC) is essential for computing the source and decoding the information contained in sound. Knowledge of AC corticocortical connections is modest other than in the primary auditory regions, nor is there an anatomical framework in the cat for understanding the patterns of connections among the many auditory areas. To address this issue, we investigated cat AC connectivity in thirteen auditory regions. Retrograde tracers were injected in the same area or in different areas to reveal… Show more

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Cited by 101 publications
(131 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
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“…11C). Comparably sparse branching is also found in the auditory thalamic (Lee and Winer, 2008a) and corticocortical (Lee and Winer, 2008b) pathways. Similar numerical values in physiologically-mapped cases intended to maximize double-labeling (Lee et al, 2004a) pertain for the sparse intra-and interareal divergence, and argue against false negatives as an explanation for the low values in mismatched injections.…”
Section: Divergence Of Commissural Axonsmentioning
confidence: 89%
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“…11C). Comparably sparse branching is also found in the auditory thalamic (Lee and Winer, 2008a) and corticocortical (Lee and Winer, 2008b) pathways. Similar numerical values in physiologically-mapped cases intended to maximize double-labeling (Lee et al, 2004a) pertain for the sparse intra-and interareal divergence, and argue against false negatives as an explanation for the low values in mismatched injections.…”
Section: Divergence Of Commissural Axonsmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…This is unexpected because of the apparent commissural specificity in other studies (Rouiller et al, 1991;Imig and Reale, 1980;reviewed in Winer, 1992). Heterotopic projections preferentially link areas with similar thalamic (Lee and Winer, 2008a) and corticocortical (Lee and Winer, 2008b) affiliations, e.g., in non-primary perivisual areas such as ED and in limbicrelated regions such as area In (Figs. 4, 9).…”
Section: Origins Of Homotopic Projectionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Projections from the PAF and VPAF are largely similar, connecting strongly with other tonotopic fields. One distinguishing feature is that the VPAF has stronger connections with nontonotopic multisensory areas on the posterior ectosylvian gyrus (Lee and Winer, 2008b). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on neuroanatomical studies, we hypothesized that the weak projections from A1 to A2 (Lee and Winer, 2008) would result in small changes in A2 neuronal response properties during A1 deactivation. Conversely, the larger number of projections from A2 to A1 would substantially influence the response properties of A1 neurons during A2 deactivation (Lee and Winer, 2008). However, the results did not support our hypothesis and demonstrated a comparable reduction in response strength in both fields during epochs of deactivation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%