Abstract: | Here we investigate the functional organization of structures involved in sensory analysis in a restricted region of a cortical projection area. We have shown that stimulation of somatosensory areas I and II (SI and SII) may block an afferent volley at the level of the thalamic relay nucleus, and that SII may be selectively blocked by stimulation of SI. Also definite somatosensory connections have been demonstrated between SII, SI, and the motor cortex. We suggest that common mechanisms underlie the generation of focal reactions in projection areas of the cortex induced by stimulation of various structures. The properties of two groups of neurones from area SII are described: those having a short latency and receiving direct projections from the thalamic relay nucleus, and those of long latent period with a well-marked convergence, and reacting to stimulation of various afferent pathways. It is suggested that each path to a local point of a cortical projection areas terminates with its relay element. The signal is then directed to a common intracortical system of neurones where signals from various sources occurs (afferent, interhemispherical, subcortico-cortical, and intracortical) converge and interact. All groups of neurones are involved in the formation of the common components of evoked potentials.Presented to the All-Union Symposium: "Electrical responses of the cerebral cortex to afferent stimuli," Kiev, October, 1969.Institute of Normal and Pathological Physiology, Academy of Medical Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 2, No. 2, pp. 155–165, March–April, 1970. |