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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 5 May 2001, pp. 1823-1835
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
School of Physiology and Pharmacology, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia
Zhang, H. Q.,
M. K. Zachariah,
G. T. Coleman, and
M. J. Rowe.
Hierarchical Equivalence of Somatosensory Areas I and II for
Tactile Processing in the Cerebral Cortex of the Marmoset
Monkey. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 1823-1835, 2001. Responsiveness of the first somatosensory area (SI) of the
cerebral cortex was investigated in the marmoset monkey
(Callithrix jacchus) in association with cooling-induced,
reversible inactivation of the second somatosensory area, SII. The aim
was to determine whether SI responsiveness to peripheral tactile
stimulation depends on SII and therefore whether SI and SII in the
marmoset occupy hierarchically equivalent positions in a parallel
organizational scheme for thalamocortical tactile processing as appears
to be the case in nonprimate mammals. Inactivation of SII was achieved when the temperature over SII was lowered to
12°C, as indicated by
abolition of the SII-evoked potentials generated by brief tap stimuli
to the hand or foot, and by abolition of tactile responses in single
SII neurons located at the margin beneath the block. The effect of SII
inactivation on SI-evoked potentials was examined in 16 experiments by
simultaneous recording of the SI- and SII-evoked potentials. SI-evoked
potentials were never abolished and remained unaffected in 11 cases. In
three experiments there was a small reduction in amplitude and
inconsistent effects in the remaining two. Responsiveness to controlled
tactile stimuli was examined quantitatively in 31 individual SI neurons
of different functional classes before, during, and after the
inactivation of SII. Tactile responsiveness in individual SI neurons
was never abolished by SII inactivation, remaining unchanged in 20 neurons (65%) while undergoing some reduction in the remaining 11 SI
neurons (35%). This reduction of tactile responsiveness in one-third
of SI neurons is most likely attributable to a removal of a
facilitatory influence emanating from SII, based on the observation
that background activity of the affected neurons was also reduced.
Furthermore, phase locking of SI responses to vibrotactile stimulation
was unchanged when SII was inactivated. The retention of responsiveness
in SI neurons when SII was inactivated by cooling in the marmoset
demonstrates that tactile inputs can reach SI without traversing an
indirect, serially organized path through SII. The present results,
together with our previous observations that responsiveness in the
majority of SII neurons survived SI inactivation, demonstrate that
there is a parallel organization of the SI and SII areas for tactile processing in the marmoset monkey and that SI and SII occupy
hierarchically equivalent positions in a parallel processing network.
There is therefore no longer justification for the view that there are fundamental differences in the organization of thalamocortical tactile
processing for SI and SII between simian primates, in general, and other mammals.
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