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Journal ArticleDOI

Auditory corticocortical interconnections in the cat: evidence for parallel and hierarchical arrangement of the auditory cortical areas.

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TLDR
The present data suggest that the transcallosal auditory interconnections are segregated in 3 major parallel components (AAF-AI, PAF-VPAF and AII), maintaining a segregation between parallel functional channels already established for the thalamocortical auditory interConnections.
Abstract
The origin and laminar arrangement of the homolateral and callosal projections to the anterior (AAF), primary (AI), posterior (PAF) and secondary (AII) auditory cortical areas were studied in the cat by means of electrophysiological recording and WGA-HRP tracing techniques The transcallosal projections to AAF, AI, PAF and AII were principally homotypic since the major source of input was their corresponding area in the contralateral cortex Heterotypic transcallosal projections to AAF and AI were seen, originating from the contralateral AI and AAF, respectively PAF received heterotypic commissural projections from the opposite ventroposterior auditory cortical field (VPAF) Heterotypic callosal inputs to AII were rare, originating from AAF and AI The neurons of origin of the transcallosal connections were located mainly in layers II and III (70–92%), and less frequently in deep layers (V and VI, 8–30%) Single unit recordings provided evidence that both homotypic and heterotypic transcallosal projections connect corresponding frequency regions of the two hemispheres The regional distribution of the anterogradely labeled terminals indicated that the homotypic and heterotypic auditory transcallosal projections are reciprocal The present data suggest that the transcallosal auditory interconnections are segregated in 3 major parallel components (AAF-AI, PAF-VPAF and AII), maintaining a segregation between parallel functional channels already established for the thalamocortical auditory interconnections For the intrahemispheric connections, the analysis of the retrograde tracing data revealed that AAF and AI receive projections from the homolateral cortical areas PAF, VPAF and AII, whose neurons of origin were located mainly in their deep (V and VI) cortical layers The reciprocal interconnections between the homolateral AAF and AI did not show a preferential laminar arrangement since the neurons of origin were distributed almost evenly in both superficial (II and III) and deep (V and VI) cortical layers On the contrary, PAF received inputs from the homolateral cortical fields AAF, AI, AII and VPAF, originating predominantly from their superficial (II and III) layers The homolateral projections reaching AII originated mainly from the superficial layers of AAF and AI, but from the deep layers of VPAF and PAF The laminar distribution of anterogradely labeled terminal fields, when they were dense enough for a confident identification, was systematically related to the laminar arrangement of neurons of origin of the reciprocal projection: a projection originating from deep layers was associated with a reciprocal projection terminating mainly in layer IV, whereas a projection originating from superficial layers was associated with a reciprocal projection terminating predominantly outside layer IV This laminar distribution indicates that the homolateral auditory cortical interconnections have a feed-forward/feed-back organization, corresponding to a hierarchical arrangement of the auditory cortical areas, according to criteria previously established in the visual system of primates The principal auditory cortical areas could be ranked into 4 distinct hierarchical levels The tonotopically organized areas AAF and AI represent the lowest level The second level corresponds to the non-tonotopically organized area AII Higher, the tonotopically organized areas VPAF and PAF occupy the third and fourth hierarchical levels, respectively

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Citations
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Multisensory Interplay Reveals Crossmodal Influences on ‘Sensory-Specific’ Brain Regions, Neural Responses, and Judgments

TL;DR: This work surveys recent progress in this multisensory field, foregrounding human studies against the background of invasive animal work and highlighting possible underlying mechanisms.
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Laminar Structure of Spontaneous and Sensory-Evoked Population Activity in Auditory Cortex

TL;DR: The similarity of sparseness patterns for both neural events and distinct spread of activity may reflect similarity of local processing and differences in the flow of information through cortical circuits, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of connectivity in the cat cerebral cortex.

TL;DR: It is shown that hierarchical rules, when applied to the cat visual system, define a largely consistent hierarchy, and in both auditory and visual systems, the ordering of areas by hierarchical analysis and by optimization analysis was statistically significantly related.
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What's to lose and what's to learn: development under auditory deprivation, cochlear implants and limits of cortical plasticity.

TL;DR: The ability to learn is compromised in sensory deprivation, resulting in a sensitive period for recovery, and the developmental decrease in capacity for "bottom-up regulated" reorganizations cannot be complemented by an increasing influence of top-down modulations.
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Connections of the auditory forebrain in the pigeon (columba livia)

TL;DR: The organization of Field L2, and that of its flanking regions, L1 and L3, was investigated with 14C‐2‐deoxyglucose, cytochrome oxidase, and both retrograde and anterograde tracing techniques.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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