Abstract

Neuroscience Sensory information can only be used meaningfully in the brain when integrated with and compared with internally generated top-down signals. However, we know little about the brainwide afferents that convey such top-down signals, their information content, and learning-related plasticity. Pardi et al. identified the higher-order thalamus as a major source of top-down input to mouse auditory cortex and investigated a circuit in cortical layer 1 that facilitates plastic changes and flexible responses. These results demonstrate how top-down feedback information can reach cortical areas through a noncortical structure that has received little attention despite its widespread connections with the cortex. Science , this issue p. [844][1] [1]: /lookup/doi/10.1126/science.abc2399

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