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Drivers from the deep: the contribution of collicular input to thalamocortical processing.
Abstract
A traditional view of the thalamus is that it is a relay station which receives sensory
input and conveys this information to cortex. This sensory input determines most of
the properties of first order thalamic neurons, and so is said to drive, rather than
modulate, these neurons. This holds as a rule for first order thalamic nuclei, but
in contrast, higher order thalamic nuclei receive much of their driver input back
from cerebral cortex. In addition, higher order thalamic neurons receive inputs from
subcortical movement-related centers. In the terminology popularized from studies
of the sensory system, can we consider these ascending motor inputs to thalamus from
subcortical structures to be modulators, subtly influencing the activity of their
target neurons, or drivers, dictating the activity of their target neurons? This chapter
summarizes relevant evidence from neuronal recording, inactivation, and stimulation
of pathways projecting from the superior colliculus through thalamus to cerebral cortex.
The study concludes that many inputs to the higher order nuclei of the thalamus from
subcortical oculomotor areas - from the superior colliculus and probably other midbrain
and pontine regions - should be regarded as motor drivers analogous to the sensory
drivers at the first order thalamic nuclei. These motor drivers at the thalamus are
viewed as being at the top of a series of feedback loops that provide information
on impending actions, just as sensory drivers provide information about the external
environment.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Action PotentialsAnimals
Cerebral Cortex
Eye Movements
Humans
Neurons
Psychomotor Performance
Superior Colliculi
Thalamus
Visual Pathways
Visual Perception
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/11743Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1016/S0079-6123(05)49015-9Publication Info
Wurtz, Robert H; Sommer, Marc A; & Cavanaugh, James (2005). Drivers from the deep: the contribution of collicular input to thalamocortical processing.
Prog Brain Res, 149. pp. 207-225. 10.1016/S0079-6123(05)49015-9. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/11743.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Marc A. Sommer
Professor of Biomedical Engineering
We study circuits for cognition. Using a combination of neurophysiology and biomedical
engineering, we focus on the interaction between brain areas during visual perception,
decision-making, and motor planning. Specific projects include the role of frontal
cortex in metacognition, the role of cerebellar-frontal circuits in action timing,
the neural basis of "good enough" decision-making (satisficing), and the neural mechanisms
of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS).

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