The Journal of Neuroscience, August 20, 2003, 23(20):7510-7515
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BRIEF COMMUNICATION
Auditory Cortical Neurons Respond to Somatosensory Stimulation
Kai-Ming G. Fu,1,2
Taylor A. Johnston,1,2
Ankoor S. Shah,1,2
Lori Arnold,3
John Smiley,2
Troy A. Hackett,4
Preston E. Garraghty,3 and
Charles E. Schroeder1,2
1Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New
York 10461, 2Nathan Kline Institute, Orangeburg, New
York 10962, 3Department of Psychology, Program in
Neural Science, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405, and
4Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee
37203
 |
Abstract
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The prevailing hierarchical model of cortical sensory processing holds that
early processing is specific to individual modalities and that combination of
information from different modalities is deferred until higher-order stages of
processing. In this paper, we present physiological evidence of multisensory
convergence at an early stage of cortical auditory processing. We used
multi-neuron cluster recordings, along with a limited sample of single-unit
recordings, to determine whether neurons in the macaque auditory cortex
respond to cutaneous stimulation. We found coextensive cutaneous and auditory
responses in caudomedial auditory cortex, an area lying adjacent to A1, and at
the second stage of the auditory cortical hierarchy. Somatosensory-auditory
convergence in auditory cortex may underlie effects observed in human studies.
Convergence of inputs from different sensory modalities at very early stages
of cortical sensory processing has important implications for both our
developing understanding of multisensory processing and established views of
unisensory processing.
Key words: multisensory; auditory; somatosensory; convergence; single unit; cutaneous
 |
Introduction
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Because sight, sound, and touch sample unique dimensions of an object,
combining information across sensory modalities provides the brain with
converging evidence concerning the position, movement, and identity of an
object. Multisensory convergence clearly does occur in numerous subcortical
structures, including superior colliculus
(Stein and Meredith, 1993
),
inferior colliculus (Groh et al.,
2001
), dorsal cochlear nucleus
(Kanold and Young, 2001
), and
the reticular formation (Amassian and
Devito, 1954
; Bell et al.,
1964
). However, there remains a longstanding view that
multisensory convergence in the neocortex is essentially a higher-order
process, deferred until each unisensory bit is thoroughly processed through
its specific sensory hierarchy (Jones and
Powell, 1970
). Consistent with this view, physiological studies in
monkeys have thus far detected multisensory convergence mainly in higher-order
areas of the parietal (Hyvarinen and
Shelepin, 1979
; Mazzoni et
al., 1996
; Duhamel et al.,
1998
), temporal (Benevento et
al., 1977
; Leinonen et al.,
1980
; Bruce et al.,
1981
; Hikosaka et al.,
1988
), and frontal lobes
(Benevento et al., 1977
;
Rizzolatti et al., 1981
;
Graziano et al., 1994
). On the
other hand, accumulating evidence from noninvasive brain measures in humans
(Calvert et al., 1997
;
Levanen et al., 1998
;
Giard and Peronet, 1999
;
Foxe et al., 2002
), direct
measurements of neural activity in monkeys
(Schroeder et al., 2001
;
Schroeder and Foxe, 2002
), and
cross connections between low-level cortices, including A1, V1, and S1
(Zhou and Fuster, 1996
;
Falchier et al., 2002
;
Rockland and Ojima, 2003
),
suggests that multisensory convergence may occur at early, putatively
unisensory, cortical processing stages.
In this paper, we investigate the nature of somatosensory inputs to the
physiologically and anatomically defined caudomedial (CM) region of macaque
auditory cortex. CM is adjacent to primary auditory cortex (A1) and receives
direct projections from it, as well as several thalamic nuclei
(Kosaki et al., 1997
;
Hackett et al., 1998
). CM is
considered to be unisensory cortex that participates in early processing of
sounds, especially complex noises
(Rauschecker et al., 1995
).
Our previous studies suggest that CM is part of a group of posterior auditory
association cortices whose neurons respond to somatosensory and visual, as
well as auditory, stimuli (Schroeder et
al., 2001
; Schroeder and Foxe,
2002
) and that these findings pertain to humans as well as monkeys
(Foxe et al., 2002
). The
current study addressed the following questions. (1) Is there cutaneous input
to CM, and, if so, which body surface(s) are represented? (2) What other
somatosensory submodalities are represented within CM?
 |
Materials and Methods
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Acute microelectrode mapping studies were conducted in two macaque monkeys
(3.0 kg Maccaca fuscata and 9.2 kg Maccaca mulatta). All
surgical and experimental procedures were approved in advance by the
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the Nathan Kline Institute.
Under anesthesia (20 mg/kg ketamine and 0.1 mg/kg xylazine) and related
support medications (atropine, 0.5 mg/kg Dexamethazone, 250 mg/kg Claforan),
the subjects underwent resection of the scalp and overlying fascia including
periosteum, followed by craniotomy to expose the cortex. The dura was then
incised and reflected, and the cortex was covered with silicon to prevent
desiccation during recording. At this time, the subject was positioned using
either a head post or hollow ear bars that allowed for presentation of
auditory stimuli.
Single neurons and neuron clusters were recorded with tungsten
microelectrodes (1.0-1.3 M
impedance) during penetrations through
auditory cortex via both vertical and lateral penetration angles. For the
vertical penetrations, one to three recording sites per penetration were
examined. During the lateral penetrations, up to nine recording sites per
penetration were examined. On the basis of the baseline neuronal firing rate
and our stereotaxic depth measurements, most of our recording sites were
located in lamina 4 or lower lamina 3. At each recording site, auditory
responses were assessed using a combination of pure tones and complex noises
(100 msec, 5 msec on-off ramps), presented using a Tucker-Davis Technologies
(Gainesville, FL) System 3 apparatus. This apparatus provided a synchronous
logic level output that was recorded concomitant with neuronal activity.
Subject to later histological verification, the boundary between core area A1
and belt area CM was determined functionally using characteristic differences
in auditory response properties
(Rauschecker et al., 1995
;
Kosaki et al., 1997
;
Hackett et al., 1998
;
Recanzone et al., 2000
;
Schroeder et al., 2001
). Also
at each recording site, somatosensory responsiveness was assessed through
testing with light cutaneous stimulation (supplied by wisps of cotton and von
Frey hairs), deep pressure stimulation, joint manipulation, vibration, and air
puffs (especially for hairy surfaces). In each case, evaluation included the
entire body surface, with the exception of the area precluded from examination
by the surgical exposure. Quantification of somatosensory responses was
effected using an electronically gated air-puff circuit. Logic level output
from a pulse generator both activated a solenoid that released a quantity of
air (solenoid open time of 0.5 sec) and was recorded in the acquisition
computer as a stimulus marker for quantification purposes. The length of the
air line between the solenoid and the monkey introduced a delay between
trigger acquisition and stimulus delivery. This delay was estimated before the
experiment by comparing neuronal responses driven by the air puff with those
driven by a time-locked electrical stimulus. This lag was then subtracted from
the latency of the somatosensory data in
Figure 3 to give an
approximation of the real onset latency to air-puff stimulation. Although
trial-to-trial temporal alignment is precise, estimation of absolute response
onset latency is less so. In a control condition for auditory contamination of
somatosensory stimuli (discussed in Results), we tested somatosensory
responses after bilateral tympanic membrane destruction. In this condition,
auditory stimulation was delivered through bone conduction, by using the
air-puff device to drive a slave cylinder that delivered light taps to the
exposed skull (periostium removed) over the midline, at a rate of one per
second. At the outset, to be sure that we were dealing with a bone-conducted
auditory-evoked response, we compared effects of tapping versus scraping,
effects of tapping at different locations of exposed bone surfaces, and we
tested for the threshold of the effect, by tapping the skull with a series of
Semmes-Weinstein monofilament fibers. Although neural responses were extremely
sensitive to temporal pattern (e.g., punctate tap versus prolonged scrape),
they were remarkably insensitive to the location of the bone surface
stimulated. Testing over a range of Semmes-Weinstein fiber sizes from 4.08
(corresponding to 1 gm of pressure) down to 1.65 (corresponding to 0.008 gm of
pressure), we found responses persisting down to very light skull taps, at
forces as little as 0.02 gm of pressure (fiber size, 2.36). In routine
testing, it was not possible to calibrate the computer-controlled stimulator
for very low force tapping, but we carefully adjusted the apparatus to make
the tap as light as possible while still operating reliably. Signals for
offline analysis were recorded using Neuroscan (El Paso, TX) Acquire, and
subsequent analysis was performed using Neuroscan Edit and Matlab software
(MathWorks, Natick, MA).

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Figure 3. Raster plots and PSTHs of somatosensory and auditory responses recorded
from a neuron isolated in CM during penetration J63. For the raster plots,
time is represented in 0.5 msec bins. For the histograms, time is represented
in 3 msec bins Auditory stimulation was presented via bone conduction, whereas
somatosensory stimulation was effected using air puffs to the dorsal surface
of the contralateral hand. These data were collected in subject J after
complete bilateral tympanic membranes ablation, which controls for the
possibility that the "somatosensory" response is actually caused
by the slight noise associated with the air puff.
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At the end of recording, monkeys were transcardially perfused with buffered
4% paraformaldehyde, followed by buffered sucrose solutions to cryoprotect the
brain. Whole brains were sectioned at 80 µm thickness with a sliding
microtome, and sections were stored in serial order in multi-welled plastic
boxes. Every 12th section through the brain was Nissl stained with cresyl
violet, and adjacent series of section were processed for acetylcholinesterase
histochemistry and parvalbumin immunoreactivity as described previously
(Schroeder et al., 2001
).
During sectioning, a video image of each section was stored onto a Macintosh
computer (Apple Computers, Cupertino, CA). The consecutive and aligned video
images corresponding to the sections used for Nissl staining were later used
for three-dimensional reconstruction of the tissue volume. Video images were
processed using NIH Image software, and volume rendering was done with MedX
(Ocala, FL) software. The boundary between primary (core) and belt regions of
auditory cortex (see Fig. 1,
dark line) was determined by examination of the series in which alternate
sections were stained for Nissl substance or processed for
acetylcholinesterase histochemistry and parvalbumin immunoreactivity.

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Figure 1. A, Locations of recording sites with respect to the boundaries of
core and belt regions of auditory cortex on an anatomical cortical
reconstruction of subject J. The tissue of the right hemisphere is removed
down to the level of the superior temporal plane. The low-magnification view
depicts the exact histological reconstruction of the pattern of recording
sites in the right hemisphere of subject J. The inset depicts the composite
reconstruction of the four hemispheres in this study, superimposed on the
reconstruction of the right hemisphere of subject J. The dark spot reflects
the location of a fluoro-ruby deposition placed at the posterior margin of our
recording field in the right hemisphere of subject J, to register the pattern
of recording sites onto the anatomy of auditory cortex. B, Below is a
wire-frame schematic to help orient the reader to the brain location and local
distribution of recording sites in auditory cortex. central S., Central
sulcus; sup. arcuate S., superior arcuate sulcus; principle S., principle
sulcus; intra-parietal S., intraparietal suclus; circular S., circular sulcus;
lateral S., lateral sulcus; sup-temporal S., superior temporal sulcus; lunate
S., lunate sulcus.
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Results
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Figure 1 presents a summary
of recording sites in the auditory cortex of one hemisphere, displayed on the
anatomical reconstruction of that hemisphere, with the overlying cortex on the
right side cut out to the level of the superior temporal plane. The area
enclosed in the black outline corresponds to the core auditory areas A1
(posterior) and R (anterior). The large black patch posterior and medial to
the core is a fluorescent marker injection made at the posterior margin of our
recording field in this hemisphere. This was made to help register the
penetration pattern onto the anatomy. The inset presents a composite of the
penetrations from all four hemispheres, superimposed on the same anatomic
reconstruction. The penetrations displaying only auditory responsiveness are
shaded white, whereas those also displaying convergent somatosensory
responsiveness are represented by colored circles. Because the majority of the
penetrations were vertical ones, and many of these contained more than one
recording site, the actual number of recording sites is under-represented
here.
Cutaneous and other submodality representations in CM
Eighty-three percent of 101 recording sites in the superior temporal plane
displayed a response to auditory stimulation. Of the auditory-responsive
recording sites posterior to A1 (mainly CM), 72% (33 of 46) were responsive to
some form of somatosensory stimulation. No recording site in A1 responded to
any form of somatosensory stimulation. Those posteromedial sites displaying
multisensory responsiveness had qualitative response properties characteristic
of auditory association cortex (Jones et
al., 1995
; Kaas et al.,
1999
). That is, the neurons at these sites responded
preferentially to complex noise stimuli and displayed broad-frequency tuning
relative to neurons in A1. In sites responsive to somatosensory stimulation,
thorough evaluation of responsiveness over the entire body surface revealed a
strong bias toward cutaneous input because 26 of 33 sites responded to
cutaneous stimulation of the head and hands. The majority of these sites (20
of 26) responded to light stimulation with air puffs or von Frey hairs,
whereas six responded to deep pressure stimulation. As discussed above, most
of our recording sites were located in lamina 4 or lower lamina 3. Given the
small number of observations of deep pressure stimulation, we were not able to
resolve a laminar preference for deep versus cutaneous stimulation.
Figure 2A illustrates
where typical cutaneous receptive fields were encountered during the course of
recording. Split receptive fields (e.g., responsiveness on both the forehead
and occiput) were not encountered, and the top of the head was not examined
because of surgical exposure. The most commonly encountered cutaneous
receptive fields were located on the head and neck. Three sites responded to
light touch, as well as to air-puff stimuli presented to the dorsal hand
surface. Receptive fields located on the head were only occasionally broad,
that is, larger than that illustrated in
Figure 2A (left), with
less than a one-quarter (five) demonstrating responsiveness to bilateral
stimulation. Approximately one-third (7 of 26) of the receptive fields were
smaller than those shown in Figure
2A based on qualitative mapping with fine cotton wisps.
Slightly over one-half (14 of 26) of the cutaneous receptive fields were of a
moderate size comparable with that illustrated in
Figure 2A. A few sites
responded to noncutaneous somatosensory stimuli. In eight sites, for example,
manipulation of the elbow joint or vibration produced neuronal responses. No
site displayed responsiveness to more than one type of somatosensory stimulus.
Figure 2B details the
submodality preference breakdown for recording sites in posterior auditory
cortex.

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Figure 2. A,Examples of typical cutaneous receptive fields of neuron
clusters encountered in this study. B, Left, Percentage of recording
sites displaying auditory responsiveness that also responded to some form of
somatosensory stimulation. Right, Proportions of each type of somatosensory
input comprising the total.
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Controls for auditory contamination of somatosensory stimulation
Given the proclivity of CM neurons to respond to complex sounds
(Rauschecker et al., 1995
;
Recanzone et al., 2000
;
Schroeder et al., 2001
), it is
important to control for the possibility that these neurons are responding to
a slight noise associated with somatosensory stimulation. In our previous
study (Schroeder et al.,
2001
), this was not a problem, because somatosensory stimulation
was supplied by a completely silent electrical shock to the median nerve. We
also noted in our previous studies that, when studying auditory-somatosensory
convergence sites, loud masking noise, by "overdriving" auditory
neurons, could make it difficult to drive activity with somatosensory as well
as auditory stimulation; this control was therefore avoided. When testing hand
cutaneous receptive fields with air puffs in the present study, a routine
control was to test for an auditory input by directing the stimulus away from
the hand, thus isolating any auditory response to the noise of the air puff,
presented at arm's length from the head. For receptive fields on the head and
neck, use of air puffs was impractical, because very close to the pinna, even
the slight noise of the air puff is clearly detectable. In this case, only
light cutaneous stimuli were applied, and bilateral tympanic membrane lesions
in one subject provided the means of eliminating any (air-conducted) auditory
concomitants of these stimuli. In this condition, auditory stimulation was
effected via bone conduction. In the tympanic lesion condition as in the
normal hearing condition, light touch with a cotton wisp was effective in
driving neuronal responses in CM. In neither the tympanic lesion nor the
normal-hearing condition did light cutaneous stimuli drive A1 neurons.
Multisensory convergence at the single neuron level
Although most recordings were of multiunit activity, on four occasions we
isolated single neurons well enough to assess multisensory convergence at this
level. Two of the isolated neurons were multisensory.
Figure 3 presents findings from
one of these cases using raster plots (Fig.
3A,B) and poststimulus time histograms (PSTHs)
(Fig. 3C,D), during
auditory (left) and somatosensory (right) stimulation. Auditory and
somatosensory stimulation consisted of complex noise and air puff,
respectively, and the somatosensory receptive field of this neuron was located
on the back of the contralateral hand. The neuron had an auditory onset
latency of
15 msec, and its estimated somatosensory onset latency was
12 msec longer. The auditory- and somatosensory-evoked firing patterns
appear distinctly different; however, this could stem from a variety of
factors, including differences in the rise time or duration of the stimulus,
as well as differences in input modality. These recordings were obtained
during the control (bilateral tympanic membrane lesion) condition described
above with auditory stimulation delivered via bone conduction.
Anatomical confirmation of recording sites
To establish the exact locations of our penetrations with respect to the
boundaries of A1 and CM, small fluorescent marker injections were placed in A1
and CM at the end of each experiment.
Figure 4 shows the histological
location of these markers in one animal with respect to standard staining
techniques for defining boundaries between cortical areas
(Jones et al., 1995
;
Hackett et al., 1998
). The
areas determined to be posterior auditory association cortex on the basis of
their electrophysiological properties were indeed caudal to A1 in the superior
temporal plane.

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Figure 4. Anatomical reconstruction of the superior temporal plane was used to
localize recording sites with respect to the fluorescent marker depositions
(dark spots on inset). Alternate sections, processed for acetylcholinesterase
(A-C), Nissl substance (D-F), and parvalbumin (data not
shown) were used to identify the borders of the primary auditory cortex (dark
outline in inset). The electrophysiologically determined caudal extent of the
primary auditory cortex (double arrows in E) corresponded well with
the anatomically identified posterior boundary of primary auditory cortex
(arrows in B, C and E, F). The location of
electrophysiologically defined caudal and medial border of CM (double arrow in
D) was 4 mm caudal to the border of the primary auditory cortex
(caudal dot in inset).
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Discussion
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Source of somatosensory input to CM
At present, there are a number of candidate sources for somatosensory
inputs to CM, and these fall into two main classes. The first is a lateral or
feedback projection from other cortical areas, such as the multisensory
regions of the superior temporal sulcus
(Hackett et al., 1998
) and
intraparietal sulcus (Lewis and Van Essen,
2000
). The second is a feedforward projection from
"nonspecific" somatosensory pathway structures, such as the
suprachiasmatic nucleus (Kaas and Hackett,
2000
). The former would be consistent with the present findings of
specific cutaneous receptive fields on the head and neck, whereas the latter
would be consistent with our previous finding that the hand input has a
short-latency, feedforward profile in CM
(Schroeder et al., 2001
). In
cats, there is proprioceptive somatosensory input from the pinna into the
subcortical auditory pathway at the level of the dorsal cochlear nucleus
(Kanold and Young, 2001
),
which, if present in primates, could fall into the feedforward class of input
sources. Both feedforward and feedback-lateral input sources are considered
active possibilities and are under investigation.
Interrelationship of multisensory processing in cortical and tectal
regions
The apparent bias of the cutaneous representation in CM toward the skin
surfaces of the head and neck (receptor surfaces not well suited for object
identification) is consistent with the hypothesis that posterior auditory
cortex represents the spatial-movement analysis or "where" pathway
in auditory processing (Rauschecker et
al., 1997
; Rauschecker,
1998
; Kaas et al.,
1999
; Romanski et al.,
1999
), analogous to the parietal pathway in the visual system
(Ungerleider and Mishkin,
1982
). Our previous findings
(Schroeder et al., 2001
)
predicted a wider representation of hand inputs than we found in the present
study. This is likely attributable to methodological differences, such as use
of awake versus anesthetized subjects, electrical versus cutaneous
somatosensory stimulation, or current source density versus action potential
analyses, but resolving this question will require additional study. The
emerging conceptual model of an auditory spatial system parallels that
proposed for the visual system, with components devoted to both spatial
representation (the interconnected parieto-temporal-prefrontal cortical
regions) and to motoric "orienting" functions (corticotectal
projections). In this model, the multisensory functions of the superior
colliculus (Stein and Meredith,
1993
) and inferior colliculus
(Groh et al., 2001
) are
proximal to motor output and, thus, are efferent rather than afferent to
cortical multisensory processing, as is often assumed. Such a hierarchical
arrangement of cortical and tectal functions is supported by the findings
that, in cats, multisensory integration in superior colliculus clearly
enhances motoric orienting (Stein and
Meredith, 1993
) and depends on active cortical inputs from rostral
lateral suprasylvian and anterior ectosylvian sulcal regions
(Jiang et al., 2001
). The
proposition that cortical and tectal multisensory functions are specifically
related in this way makes several clear and testable predictions. The first is
that the auditory spatial receptive fields of CM neurons are in register with
their cutaneous receptive fields, as is the case for the neurons displaying
somato-auditory convergence in the superior colliculus
(Meredith and Stein, 1986
;
Jiang et al., 2001
). Another
prediction is that the projections from auditory cortices into the tectal
system in monkeys (Casseday et al.,
1979
), like the cortico-tectal projections in cats
(Jiang et al., 2001
), are
necessary for any multisensory integration involving auditory inputs in
superior colliculus. In the larger context, it will be important to determine
the relationship among the various signal types present in the auditory
pathways, including cutaneous inputs from the head-neck and hand (present
results), vibratory and arm position signals (present results), eye position
signals (Groh et al., 2001
;
Werner-Reiss et al., 2001
;
Fu et al., 2002
), and pinna
position signals (Kanold and Young,
2001
). Ongoing studies are directed at these issues, along with
more detailed mapping of the cutaneous representation(s) in posterior auditory
association cortices.
Multisensory processing and cortical sensory hierarchy
Demonstration of somatosensory responsiveness in auditory association area
CM joins with recent reports of low-level cross connections between
"modality-specific" cortices
(Falchier et al., 2002
;
Rockland and Ojima, 2003
) to
directly challenge the view that neocortical multisensory convergence occurs
only in higher-order processing regions. CM is positioned at the second level
of the cortical auditory hierarchy, corresponding to visual area V2
(Felleman and Van Essen, 1991
)
and to somatosensory area 1 (Garraghty et
al., 1990
) and has not been classified previously as a
multisensory region. On the basis of its pattern of interconnectivity with
both higher- and lower-order regions
(Hackett et al., 1998
), CM
does seem to be a relatively low-level cortical processing area. The
properties of the neuronal responses in CM are typical of low-level sensory
areas in that they are robust and show little evidence of habituation under
both awake (Schroeder et al.,
2001
) and anesthetized (present results) recording conditions. Our
findings thus underscore a significant, general observation about neocortical
mechanisms of multisensory integration; that is, inputs from different
modalities converge at very early stages of cortical sensory processing. Both
our developing understanding of multisensory processing and established views
of unisensory processing must incorporate this observation.
 |
Footnotes
|
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Received Aug. 5, 2002;
revised May. 8, 2003;
accepted May. 14, 2003.
We sincerely thank Tammy McGinnis and Noelle O'Connell for technical
support, Dr.Craig Branch for MR imaging, Drs. John Foxe, Elisa Dias, Zsuzsa
Pincze, and Daniel Javitt for helpful discussions, Dr. Peter Lakatos for
graphical assistance, and Drs. Barry Stein and Jon Kaas for helpful comments
on a previous version of this manuscript. Data in this paper are from a thesis
to be submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of
Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate Division of Medical Sciences, Albert
Einstein College of Medicine, Yeshiva University.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Charles E. Schroeder, 140 Old
Orangeburg Road, Orangeburg, NY 10962. E-mail:
schrod{at}nki.rfmh.org.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/237510-06$15.00/0
 |
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