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Volume 17, Number 9,
Issue of May 1, 1997
pp. 3185-3200
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Modular Organization of Occipito-Temporal Pathways: Cortical
Connections between Visual Area 4 and Visual Area 2 and Posterior
Inferotemporal Ventral Area in Macaque Monkeys
Received Sept. 3, 1996; revised Feb. 12, 1997; accepted Feb. 14, 1997.
Daniel J. Felleman,
Youping Xiao, and
Evelyn McClendon
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, University of Texas Health
Science Center-Houston Medical School, Houston, Texas 77030
The modular organization of cortical pathways linking visual area 4 (V4) with occipital visual area 2 (V2) and inferotemporal posterior inferotemporal ventral area (PITv) was investigated through
an analysis of the patterns of retrogradely labeled cell bodies after
injections of tracers into V4 and PITv. Although cytochrome oxidase or
other stains have failed to yield reliable independent anatomical
markers for cortical modules beyond V1 and V2, V4 and PITv seem to have
modular compartments with specific patterns of cortico-cortical
connectivity. Tracer injections of V4 labeled cells in V2 (1) thin
stripes exclusively, (2) interstripes exclusively, or (3) specific
combinations of interstripe and thin stripe subcompartments. These
labeling patterns suggest (1) that there is a complicated organization
of inputs to V4, (2) that projections from V2 to V4 display a
submodular selectivity, and (3) that projections from V2 to V4 display
some degree of cross-stream convergence. Consistent with this
framework, extensive regions of PITv provide feedback projections to
interstripe-recipient portions of V4, whereas more restricted portions
of PITv provide feedback to thin stripe-recipient portions of V4.
Similarly, the feedforward projection from V4 to PITv often arose from
multiple cell clusters across a wide expanse of V4. When
distinguishable fluorescent tracers were injected into two PITv sites
separated by 3-5 mm, a variety of projection patterns was observed in
V4. In most cases, labeled cells were found in multiple,
interdigitating, nonoverlapping clusters of 1-3 mm width, whereas in
other cases the two labeled fields were highly intermixed. These
results suggest that V4 and PITv contain functional modules that can be
characterized by the specific patterns of segregated and convergent
projections they receive from lower cortical areas. These specific
patterns of intercortical input, in conjunction with intrinsic cortical circuitry, may endow extrastriate cortical neurons with new and more
complex receptive field properties.
Key words:
functional architecture;
temporal lobe;
cortical
pathways;
retrograde tracers;
cytochrome oxidase
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