Abstract

Responses of caudate neurons to electrical stimulation of the afferent input from thepulvinar thalamic nucleus and to visual stimuli of various orientations were studied extracellularly in awake chronic cats. Activation responses dominated among reactions of these neurons. The response latencies have ranged from 4 to 85 msec for units with primary activation and from 20 to 150 msec for inhibited ones. The values are indicative of both rapidly and slowly conducting afferent pathways. A possibility of monosynaptic transmission in thepulvinarcaudate projections is also revealed.Pulvinar stimulation is found to be efficient for a significant (more than 50 percent) number of caudate neurons responding to visual stimuli, including orientation-selective cells. The mode of influences from other structures of the visual system (optic tract, area 17, the Clare-Bishop area) on caudate neurons responding topulvinar stimulation is described. The data are discussed with respect to the possible role of cortical and subcortical projections of the visual system in the creation of sensory specific responses of the caudate nucleus.

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