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Article
Unilateral and bilateral projections from cortical cells to the inferior colliculus in guinea pigs
Brain Research (2005)
  • Diana Peterson, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine
  • Ryan Schofield, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
  • Brett R. Schofield, Northeast Ohio Medical University
Abstract
Auditory cortex projects directly and bilaterally to the inferior colliculus (IC). We used multiple fluorescent retrograde tracers to determine whether individual cortical cells project to both the left and right IC. Injection of different tracers into each IC labeled many cells in a sheet that extended throughout much of temporal cortex in both hemispheres. Most cells contained a single tracer, with the majority of these labeled from the ipsilateral IC. Numerous double-labeled cells were observed throughout the same areas of temporal cortex. The double-labeled cells form a small percentage of the cortical cells that project to the ipsilateral IC (6.1% on average) and a much larger percentage of the cells that project to the contralateral IC (46.4% on average). Unilaterally projecting cells are well positioned to have effects limited to one IC, whereas bilaterally projecting cells are likely to have a broader influence and may coordinate activity on the two sides of the midbrain.
Publication Date
April, 2005
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2005.02.015
Citation Information
Diana Peterson, Ryan Schofield and Brett R. Schofield. "Unilateral and bilateral projections from cortical cells to the inferior colliculus in guinea pigs" Brain Research Vol. 1042 Iss. 1 (2005) p. 62 - 72
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/diana-peterson/28/