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OverviewAlmost all of the messages that are received by the cerebral cortex from the environment or from the body's internal receptors come through the thalamus and much current thought about perceptual processing is based on sensory pathways that relay in the thalamus. This volume focuses on three major areas: the role of thalamocortical communication in cognition and attention; the role of the thalamus in communication between cortical areas; the hypothesis that much or all of the information relayed by thalamus, even to classical, pure ""sensory"" areas of cortex, represents a corollary message being sent simultaneously to motor centers. It presents a broad overview of important recent advances in these areas. Full Product DetailsAuthor: V. A. Casagrande (Professor) , S. Murray Sherman (State University of New York, Stony Brook, U.S.A.) , Ray W. Guillery (University of Wisconsin School of Medicine, Madison, U.S.A.)Publisher: Elsevier Science & Technology Imprint: Elsevier Science Ltd Volume: v. 149 Dimensions: Width: 19.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 26.20cm Weight: 1.020kg ISBN: 9780444516794ISBN 10: 0444516794 Pages: 318 Publication Date: 23 August 2005 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsPain and the primate thalamus; On the impact of attention and motor planning on the lateral geniculate nucleus; The vibrissal system as a model of thalamic operations; Connexon connexions in the thalamocortical system; Neural substrates within primary visual cortex for interactions between parallel visual pathways; Bottom up and top down dynamics in visual cortex; Dynamic properties of thalamic neurons for vision; Spike timing and synaptic dynamics at the awak thalmocortical synapse; Thalamic relays and cortical functioning; Functional cell classes and functional architecture in the early visual system of a highly visual rodent; Drivers and modulators from push-pull and balanced synaptic input; Neuronal mechanisms underlying target selection with saccadic eye movements; Cortico-cortical and thalamo-cortical information flow in the primate visual system; Corollary discharge and spatial updating: when the brain is split, is space still unified?; Drivers from the deep: the contribution of collicular input to thalamo-cortical processing; Interacting competitive selection in attention and binocular rivalry; Anatomical pathways that link perception and action; The importance of modulatory input V1 activity and perception; Dual routes to action: contributions of the dorsal and central streams to adaptive behavior; A neurophilosophical slant on consciousness researchReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |