Abstract

Activity was recorded from 343 units of rostral, mid, and posterolateral thalamus following a conditioned click stimulus (CS). Over 40% of units responded with increased discharge in cats conditioned to blink to the CS. Twenty-nine units with short latency (less than 40 ms) responses were injected intracellularly with phaseolus lectin and identified morphologically; 83% had long, thick primary dendrites with smaller secondary branches. Almost half (46%) had larger somata than the largest previously described thalamic neurons of this morphologic classification. The results suggest that a previously unidentified class of oversized cells is likely to contain many short latency, auditory responsive units. A substantial number of these cells (36%) projected extrathalamically into the internal capsule, and thus may constitute a new auditory pathway between thalamus and cortex.

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