A quantative study of the cells projecting from the lateral geniculate nucleus to the prestriate cortex in the monkey with horseradish peroxidase

1979 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masao Yukie ◽  
Yoshitomo Umitsu ◽  
Sayoko Kido ◽  
Tomoko Niihara ◽  
Eiichi Iwai
1991 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gloria D. Guiloff

AbstractThe ultrastructure of the pigeon and quail ventral lateral geniculate nucleus was analyzed with standard electron microscopy and horseradish peroxidase tracing of its retinal and tectal afferents. Six types of neurons were distinguished: two large, two medium-sized, and two small types.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshihito Shigihara ◽  
Hideyuki Hoshi ◽  
Semir Zeki

AbstractPrevious studies with the visual motion and form systems show that visual stimuli belonging to these categories trigger much earlier latency responses from the visual cortex than previously supposed and that the source of the earliest signals can be located in either the prestriate cortex or in both the striate (V1) and prestriate cortex. This is consistent with the known anatomical connections since, in addition to the classical retino-geniculo-striate cortex input, there are direct anatomical inputs from both the lateral geniculate nucleus and the pulvinar that reach the prestriate visual cortex without passing through V1. In pursuing our studies, we thought it especially interesting to study another cardinal visual attribute, namely colour, to learn whether colour stimuli also provoke very early responses, at less than 50 ms, from visual cortex. To address the question, we asked participants to view stimuli that changed in colour and used magneto-encephalography to detect very early responses (< 50 ms) in the occipital visual cortex. Our results show that coloured stimuli also provoke an early cortical response (M30), with an average peak time at 30.8 ms, thus bringing the colour system into line with the visual motion and form systems. We conclude that colour signals reach visual cortex, including prestriate visual cortex, earlier than previously supposed.Key points summaryWe measured visual evoked responses to colour stimuli using magnetoencephalography.An early response was identified, at around 30 ms after stimulation.The sources of the response were estimated to be in prestriate cortex.Colour signals thus appear to evoke very early cortical responses, just like form and motion signals.Abbreviations listMEGmagnetoencephalography;LGNlateral geniculate nucleus;EEGelectroencephalography;ISIinter-stimulus interval;VEFvisual evoked magnetic field;SNRsignal to noise ratio;fTfemto Tesla;ANOVAanalysis of variance;MSPmultiple sparse priors;MRImagnetic resonance imaging;RMSroot-mean-square;SOIsensor of interest.


1987 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Sur ◽  
M. Esguerra ◽  
P. E. Garraghty ◽  
M. F. Kritzer ◽  
S. M. Sherman

1.We studied the morphology of individual, physiologically identified retinogeniculate axons in normal adult cats. The axons were recorded in the lateral geniculate nucleus or in the subjacent optic tract, characterized as X or Y by physiological criteria, penetrated, and injected with horseradish peroxidase. With subsequent application of appropriate histochemistry, the enzyme provides a complete label of the terminal arbors and parent trunks for morphological analysis. We have recovered for such analysis 26 X- and 25 Y-axons; of these, 14 X- and 12 Y-axons were studied in detail. 2. Within the optic tract, the parent trunk of every X-axon is located closer to the lateral geniculate nucleus and thus further from the pial surface than that of every Y-axon. This probably reflects the earlier development of X- than of Y-axons. Furthermore, the parent axon trunks of the X-axons are noticeably thinner than are those of the Y-axons. Every retinogeniculate X- and Y-axon in our sample branches within the optic tract. One of these branches heads dorsally to innervate the lateral geniculate nucleus and one heads medially and rostrally toward the midbrain, although none of these labeled axons were traced to a terminal arbor beyond the lateral geniculate nucleus. For Y-axons, all branches are of comparable diameter, but for X-axons, the branch heading toward the lateral geniculate nucleus is always noticeably thicker than is the branch directed toward the midbrain. 3. Every retinogeniculate X- and Y-axon produces the greatest portion of its terminal arbor in lamina A (if from the contralateral retina) or A1 (if from the ipsilateral retina). These arbors typically extend across most of the lamina along a projection line. Not a single terminal bouton from any axon was found in the inappropriate lamina A or A1 (i.e., in lamina A for ipsilaterally projecting axons or in lamina A1 for contralaterally projecting ones). Occasionally, an X-axon also innervates the medial interlaminar nucleus, and even more rarely does an X-axon innervate the C-laminae. In contrast, nearly all Y-axons from the contralateral retina branch to innervate part of the C-laminae (probably lamina C), and most from either retina also innervate the medial interlaminar nucleus. Although these details imply considerable variation in the overall pattern of retinogeniculate innervation for both X- and Y-axons, we found no physiological properties to correlate with this variation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document