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Cerebral Cortex Advance Access published online on August 21, 2006

Cerebral Cortex, doi:10.1093/cercor/bhl061
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© The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Article

Spatiotemporal Properties of Eye Position Signals in the Primate Central Thalamus

Masaki Tanaka 1 *

1 Department of Physiology, Hokkaido University School of Medicine, Sapporo 060-8638, Japan

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Masaki Tanaka, E-mail: masaki{at}med.hokudai.ac.jp


   Abstract

Although both sensory and motor signals in multiple cortical areas are modulated by eye position, the origin of eye position signals for cortical neurons remains uncertain. One likely source is the central thalamus, which contains neurons sensitive to eye position. Because the central thalamus receives inputs from the brainstem, these neurons may transmit eye position signals arising from the neural integrator or from proprioceptive feedback. However, because the central thalamus also receives inputs from many cortical areas, eye position signals in the central thalamus could come from the cerebral cortex. To clarify these possibilities, spatial and temporal properties of eye position signals in the central thalamus were examined in trained monkeys. Data showed that eye position signals were decomposed into horizontal and vertical components, suggesting that the central thalamus lies within pathways that transmit brainstem eye position signals to the cortex. Further quantitative analyses suggested that 2 distinct groups of thalamic neurons mediate eye position signals from different subcortical origins, and that the signals are modified dynamically through ascending pathways. Eye position signals through the central thalamus may play essential roles in spatial transformation performed by cortical networks.

Keywords: efference copy; monkey; neural integrator; single neurons; thalamocortical pathways.
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M. Tanaka
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J. Neurosci., October 31, 2007; 27(44): 12109 - 12118.
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