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Journal ArticleDOI

Cortical connections of striate and extrastriate visual areas in tree shrews

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TLDR
The results provide further evidence for modular organizations within V1 and V2, and reveal for the first time the complete patterns of cortical connections of V2 and TD, fortifying the conclusion that TD is the likely homologue of the middle temporal visual area of primates.
Abstract
The ipsilateral and contralateral cortical connections of visual cortex of tree shrews (Tupaia belangeri) were investigated by placing restricted injections of fluorochrome tracers, wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase, or biotinylated dextran amine into area 17 (V1), area 18 (V2), or the adjoining temporal dorsal area (TD). As previously reported, V1 was characterized by a widespread, patchy pattern of intrinsic connections; ipsilateral connections with V2, TD, and to a lesser extent, other areas of the temporal cortex; and contralateral connections with V1, V2, and TD. A surface-view of the myelin pattern in V1 revealed a patchwork of light and dark module-like regions. The ipsilateral connections with V2 and TD were roughly topographic, whereas heterotopic locations in V1 were callosally connected. Injections in V2 labeled as much as one third of V2 in a patchy pattern, and portions of ipsilateral V1 and TD in roughly topographic patterns. In addition, connections with several other visual areas in the temporal lobe were revealed. Contralaterally, most of the label was in V2, with some in V1 and TD. Injections in TD demonstrated connections within the region, and with adjoining portions of the temporal cortex, V2, and V1. There were sparse connections with an oval of densely myelinated cortex, which we have termed the temporal inferior area (TI). Callosal connections were concentrated in TD, but also included V2. The results provide further evidence for modular organizations within V1 and V2, and reveal for the first time the complete patterns of cortical connections of V2 and TD. The results are consistent with the proposal that at least three visual areas, the temporal anterior area, TA, the temporal dorsal area, TD, and the temporal posterior area, TP, exist along the rostrolateral border of V2 in tree shrews; suggest visual involvement of at least three other areas, the temporal inferior area, TI, the temporal anterior lateral area, and the temporal posterior inferior area located more ventrally in the temporal cortex; and fortify the conclusion that TD is the likely homologue of the middle temporal visual area of primates. Because tree shrews are considered close relatives of primates, the evidence for several visual areas along the border of V2 is more compatible with theories that propose a series of visual areas along V2 in primates, rather than a single visual area, V3.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Area map of mouse visual cortex

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used triple pathway tracing combined with receptive field recordings to map azimuth and elevation in the same brain and have referenced these maps against callosal landmarks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why is Brain Size so Important:Design Problems and Solutions as Neocortex Gets Biggeror Smaller

TL;DR: As bridges or brains become bigger or smaller, the changes pose problems of design that need to be solved by making brains more modular, thereby reducing the lengths of many connections, and by altering functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution of somatosensory and motor cortex in primates.

TL;DR: Early primates retained this basic organization and also had a larger posterior parietal region that mediated sensorimotor functions via connections with motor and premotor areas, and Posterior parietal cortex expanded into more areas that related to frontal cortex.
Journal ArticleDOI

The evolution of visual cortex: where is V2?

TL;DR: A comparative analysis of the area of the cortex that is adjacent to the primary visual area (V1), indicates that the lateral extrastriate cortex of primitive mammals was likely to contain only a single visuotopically organized field, the second visual areas (V2).
Journal ArticleDOI

The Representation of the Visual Field in Three Extrastriate Areas of the Ferret (Mustela putorius) and the Relationship of Retinotopy and Field Boundaries to Callosal Connectivity

TL;DR: Representations of the visual field in areas 18, 19 and 21 of the ferret using standard microelectrode mapping techniques are described and proposed homologies of carnivore and primate visual cortex are discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Distributed Hierarchical Processing in the Primate Cerebral Cortex

TL;DR: A summary of the layout of cortical areas associated with vision and with other modalities, a computerized database for storing and representing large amounts of information on connectivity patterns, and the application of these data to the analysis of hierarchical organization of the cerebral cortex are reported on.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visual feature integration and the temporal correlation hypothesis

TL;DR: The mammalian visual system is endowed with a nearly infinite capacity for the recognition of patterns and objects, but to have acquired this capability the visual system must have solved what is a fundamentally combinatorial prob­ lem.
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A cortical network for directed attention and unilateral neglect.

TL;DR: A network approach to the localization of complex functions offers an alternative to more extreme approaches, some of which stress an exclusive concentration of function within individual centers in the brain and others which advocate a more uniform (equipotential or holistic) distribution.
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Changes in the visual system of monocularly sutured or enucleated cats demonstrable with cytochrome oxidase histochemistry

TL;DR: The results indicated that the deprivation caused by monocular suture produced a decrease in the cytochrome oxidase staining of the binocular segment of the deprived geniculate laminae of kittens, leading to a significant decreases in the level of oxidative enzyme activity one to several synapses away.
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Orientation Selectivity and the Arrangement of Horizontal Connections in Tree Shrew Striate Cortex

TL;DR: The results indicate that horizontal connections outside a radius of 500 μm from the injection site exhibit not only modular specificity, but also specificity for axis of projection, suggesting specific ways that horizontal circuits contribute to the response properties of layer 2/3 neurons and to mechanisms of visual perception.
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