Auditory-prefrontal axonal connectivity in the macaque cortex: quantitative assessment of processing streams
Publication year
2014Source
Brain and Language, 135, (2014), pp. 73-84ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Cognitive Neuroscience
Journal title
Brain and Language
Volume
vol. 135
Page start
p. 73
Page end
p. 84
Subject
Radboudumc 0: Other Research DCMN: Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience; Radboudumc 12: Sensory disorders DCMN: Donders Center for Medical NeuroscienceAbstract
Primate sensory systems subserve complex neurocomputational functions. Consequently, these systems are organised anatomically in a distributed fashion, commonly linking areas to form specialised processing streams. Each stream is related to a specific function, as evidenced from studies of the visual cortex, which features rather prominent segregation into spatial and non-spatial domains. It has been hypothesised that other sensory systems, including auditory, are organised in a similar way on the cortical level. Recent studies offer rich qualitative evidence for the dual stream hypothesis. Here we provide a new paradigm to quantitatively uncover these patterns in the auditory system, based on an analysis of multiple anatomical studies using multivariate techniques. As a test case, we also apply our assessment techniques to more ubiquitously-explored visual system. Importantly, the introduced framework opens the possibility for these techniques to be applied to other neural systems featuring a dichotomised organisation, such as language or music perception.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [246165]
- Electronic publications [133717]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [93268]
- Open Access publications [107229]
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