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1  specific cellular and network mechanisms of corticocortical activity state coupling.
2 ements; this may be the result of increasing corticocortical activity to compensate for striatal dysf
3    In the present study, we investigated the corticocortical afferent projections of one of these sub
4 sensory systems, central olfactory pathways, corticocortical and commissural connections, and pathway
5 rm two major types of long-range connections-corticocortical and cortico-subcortical.
6 ene expression leads to aberrantly motorized corticocortical and corticofugal output connectivity.
7 gyrus, and they suggest an important role of corticocortical and corticolimbic forward connections in
8 f the marmoset PFC and found two contrasting corticocortical and corticostriatal projection patterns:
9 orphologically diverse cell groups that have corticocortical and corticosubcortical projections.
10  describes the ipsilateral and contralateral corticocortical and corticothalamic connectivity of the
11  describes the ipsilateral and contralateral corticocortical and corticothalamic connectivity of the
12 d diminished functional connectivity (FC) in corticocortical and frontostriatal connections.
13 hypoconnectivity dominated, particularly for corticocortical and interhemispheric functional connecti
14 ory areas is strongly influenced by nonlocal corticocortical and neuromodulatory inputs.
15 sory and motor properties, likely reflecting corticocortical and neuromodulatory inputs.
16                              We propose that corticocortical and pulvinocortical connections are invo
17  affecting computations involving long-range corticocortical and subcortical inputs, yet their respon
18 ocortical layer 1 (L1) is the main target of corticocortical and subcortical projections that mediate
19 of both ascending modulatory and fast-acting corticocortical and subcortical-cortical neural pathways
20                                        These corticocortical and thalamocortical changes in functiona
21 nce of different communication relayed among corticocortical and thalamocortical circuitry for the ab
22  might be a general feature of long-distance corticocortical and thalamocortical circuits.
23 thalamic areas that are themselves linked by corticocortical and thalamocortical connections.
24  was used to assess the relationship between corticocortical and thalamocortical connectivity and aty
25  role that layer 3 pyramidal neurons play in corticocortical and thalamocortical connectivity, we hyp
26 ovide novel insight by showing that specific corticocortical and thalamocortical functional connectiv
27 ese results highlight the importance of both corticocortical and thalamocortical interactions in rewa
28  order to determine the origin and extent of corticocortical and thalamocortical projections to layer
29                                         Both corticocortical and trans-thalamic pathways mainly signa
30 dense synaptic zone consisting of horizontal corticocortical and widespread layer VII projections, in
31 l extrinsic projection systems (commissural, corticocortical, and thalamocortical) in all AC areas.
32 ynapses suggests the involvement of DISC1 in corticocortical as well as thalamocortical connections.
33  We found lower membrane excitability of the corticocortical axons and normal intracortical gamma-ami
34 rior part of secondary motor cortex receives corticocortical axons from the rostral retrosplenial cor
35 amine, basal forebrain, thalamocortical, and corticocortical axons is mainly responsible for this reg
36  hand use and are densely interconnected via corticocortical axons, lacking a sharp demarcating borde
37  connections tend to be larger than those of corticocortical, but the projection foci are less dense.
38  tightly interlinked with local cortical and corticocortical (CC) circuits, forming extended chains o
39 ur classes of efferent neurons were studied: corticocortical (CC) neurons with ipsilateral projection
40                                              Corticocortical (CC) projections in the visual system fa
41       We focused on thalamocortical (TC) and corticocortical (CC) synapses along the apical-basal axi
42 lamocortical (TC) synapses are stronger than corticocortical (CC) synapses.
43  mouse AC, defined by their output as either corticocortical (CCort) or corticocollicular (CCol).
44 ese input areas show that excitatory Layer 6 corticocortical cells (L6 CCs) are a major projection pa
45 dicating that corticothalamic and interareal corticocortical cells in the subgranular layers represen
46 erlap between corticothalamic and interareal corticocortical cells in the subgranular layers.
47                                 We uncover a corticocortical circuit in primary somatosensory cortex
48 he structural and functional properties of a corticocortical circuit that could enable movement-relat
49 se findings establish an excitatory RSC-->M2 corticocortical circuit that engages diverse types of ex
50 , we demonstrate that distinct intrinsic and corticocortical circuitries arise from barrel and septal
51                Our work in a rodent model of corticocortical circuitry demonstrates that feedback pat
52 nt with abnormalities in thalamocortical and corticocortical circuitry, suggesting that disruption of
53 y a central role in both thalamocortical and corticocortical circuitry.
54  a model, we characterized the intrinsic and corticocortical circuits arising in the major propriocep
55 ct amyloid deposition suggests that specific corticocortical circuits express selective, but late, vu
56 gement of parallel direct and trans-thalamic corticocortical circuits may be present as a general fea
57 ract tracing analyses of the organization of corticocortical circuits of identified layers of primary
58 tion of the ipsilesional corticothalamic and corticocortical circuits, and the extent of activation w
59 uce differential patterns of intra-areal and corticocortical circuits.
60                           This suggests that corticocortical communication frequencies in the PMv-M1
61                By influencing network state, corticocortical communication from motor cortex may ensu
62  wS2 by whisker stimuli and the emergence of corticocortical communication from wS1 to wS2.
63 dulatory functions can be expected to act on corticocortical communication in addition to their actio
64 esults emphasize the importance of recurrent corticocortical communication in the maintenance of cons
65         The efficacy of spiking synchrony in corticocortical communication is poorly understood.
66                                   Long-range corticocortical communication may have important roles i
67                                Historically, corticocortical communication was thought to occur exclu
68 or and implications of having two routes for corticocortical communication with an emphasis on unique
69  relays seem especially important to general corticocortical communication, and this challenges and e
70 halamo-cortical pathway that is critical for corticocortical communication.
71 der thalamic relays), thus serving a role in corticocortical communication.
72 cortex, reflecting a transthalamic route for corticocortical communication.
73 ting a role for the higher-order thalamus in corticocortical communication.
74  This suggests a generalized arrangement for corticocortical communication.
75 her primates, is well positioned to regulate corticocortical communication.
76 cy range (30-100 Hz) are thought to subserve corticocortical communication.
77  from corticosubcortical to more predominant corticocortical communications in the human brain.
78         We corroborated our findings using a corticocortical computational model representing perturb
79 ignificant because PPC and AGm are linked by corticocortical connections and are both critical compon
80 eaved auditory processing modules related to corticocortical connections and embedded in the isofrequ
81 us may provide a substrate for plasticity in corticocortical connections and Schaffer collateral syna
82 to simple cells, and others have argued that corticocortical connections are likely to be important i
83                                       Direct corticocortical connections are often paralleled by tran
84 oanatomical studies have long indicated that corticocortical connections are organized in networks th
85                                          The corticocortical connections between RSC and secondary mo
86 hat the 3D branching structure of macroscale corticocortical connections follows the same organizatio
87                                    Ascending corticocortical connections from subgriseal neurons were
88                  These data demonstrate that corticocortical connections in cat somatosensory cortex
89  studies over the last 50 years, the role of corticocortical connections in motor control and the pri
90 it arises with the evolutionary expansion of corticocortical connections in primates, crossing the th
91 essor of Ctip2 and regulatory determinant of corticocortical connections in the developing cerebral c
92                              Knowledge of AC corticocortical connections is modest other than in the
93                               We studied the corticocortical connections of architectonically defined
94 ration of neurons that furnish glutamatergic corticocortical connections that subserve cognition.
95 siderable information is available about the corticocortical connections to the IPL, much less is kno
96  system thalamocortical and interhemispheric corticocortical connections was estimated using probabil
97                                         Most corticocortical connections were patchy, in a manner sug
98 ralized principles of feedback applicable to corticocortical connections will also be considered.
99 udal AGm parallel their known differences in corticocortical connections, and represent another basis
100  that primarily affects intrahemispheric and corticocortical connections, and that places these two d
101 between cortical areas in parallel to direct corticocortical connections, but their specific role in
102                    Despite the importance of corticocortical connections, few published studies have
103               In addition to this cascade of corticocortical connections, the auditory cortex receive
104   Because these cortical areas are linked by corticocortical connections, the present findings indica
105 the L4SS cell from excitatory and inhibitory corticocortical connections, which were simulated (both
106 idate strengthened several corticolimbic and corticocortical connections.
107  thalamus and other ipsilateral and callosal corticocortical connections.
108 w that such communication is based on direct corticocortical connections.
109 eurodegenerative diseases that proceed along corticocortical connections.
110 s also a progressive shift in the pattern of corticocortical connections.
111 primate visual cortex have different sets of corticocortical connections.
112  where it is thought to arise primarily from corticocortical connections.
113 o support function through enabling targeted corticocortical connections.
114 complexes, but differed in their patterns of corticocortical connections.
115 -subcortical connectivity and short-distance corticocortical connections.
116 y by controlling the refinement of recurrent corticocortical connections.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The f
117 rence in the proportion of cortex devoted to corticocortical connectivity across these orders.
118 owed that control subjects exhibited greater corticocortical connectivity among middle cingulate, pos
119 oncerning the existence of neural areas, for corticocortical connectivity among neural areas, and for
120 her association areas, with modifications of corticocortical connectivity and gene expression, althou
121  We first determined the extent of intrinsic corticocortical connectivity between the hand and the fa
122 se was accompanied by a decrease in backward corticocortical connectivity from frontal to parietal co
123 ons of tractography for analyzing interareal corticocortical connectivity in nonhuman primates and a
124 ming earlier reports of the patchy nature of corticocortical connectivity in the adult cat somatosens
125 on pattern to the functional organization of corticocortical connectivity in the mouse cortex.
126 rticipate in the refinement of the recurrent corticocortical connectivity in those layers.
127                  To investigate, we analyzed corticocortical connectivity patterns from electroenceph
128 seline compared with controls, whereas their corticocortical connectivity remained intact.
129 rain magnetic resonance imaging, large-scale corticocortical connectivity was mapped from ages 12 to
130 strated column-scale precision of reciprocal corticocortical connectivity, suggesting that PFC contai
131 erved a breakdown of subcortico-cortical and corticocortical connectivity.
132 ea-to-area serial or hierarchical pattern of corticocortical connectivity.
133  the size of layer 3 neurons-and whole-brain corticocortical connectivity.
134 that deficits in thalamocortical, as well as corticocortical, connectivity contribute to auditory dys
135 results are consistent with abnormalities in corticocortical, corticobasal ganglia, mesocortical dopa
136 tem cell-grafted rats demonstrated increased corticocortical, corticostriatal, corticothalamic and co
137 ontains subnetworks corresponding to classic corticocortical, corticosubcortical, and subcortico-subc
138 ygdalocortical communication and distributed corticocortical coupling across multiple functional brai
139 ith theoretical perspectives positing that a corticocortical "disconnection" partly explains cognitiv
140 ce of simulated external thalamocortical and corticocortical drives can produce the FC-ERP, similar t
141                     However, the dynamics of corticocortical effective connectivity has never been di
142                                              Corticocortical evoked potential analysis revealed that
143 ith single-pulse electrical stimulation, and corticocortical evoked potential responses were measured
144                                     Reliable corticocortical evoked potentials (CCEPs) were measured
145  Using two measures of network connectivity, corticocortical evoked potentials (indexing effective co
146 ng rest predict the pattern and magnitude of corticocortical evoked potentials elicited within 500 ms
147                                              Corticocortical evoked potentials of unique shape and hi
148              Emerging evidence suggests that corticocortical-evoked potentials (CCEPs) resulting from
149 an be made for impairment of hippocampal and corticocortical excitatory pathways, but in general the
150 ping of the dendritic distributions of these corticocortical excitatory synapses onto CSPs in both ar
151 t, regular-spiking neurons, which are mainly corticocortical, exhibited sharp frequency tuning simila
152                                              Corticocortical FA was significantly reduced only in whi
153 matically clustered manner, possibly through corticocortical feedback and horizontal connections.
154 tex by specifically altering the strength of corticocortical feedback in a layer-dependent manner.
155                  We studied the influence of corticocortical feedback in alert monkeys using cortical
156 ts demonstrate the involvement of the direct corticocortical feedback pathway, providing temporally p
157 eep-layer cortical neurons that provide both corticocortical feedforward inputs (to area MT) and cort
158 ity to study the human cortical networks and corticocortical functional connectivity mediating arbitr
159 activity to reveal the cortical networks and corticocortical functional connectivity mediating visuom
160 ion of amygdala impacts amygdalocortical and corticocortical functional connectivity.
161 nt of the underlying cognitive processes and corticocortical functional connectivity.
162 ings inform our understanding of large-scale corticocortical influence as well as the interpretation
163 i may then provide a complementary route for corticocortical information flow.
164 simulations, reveal that the nonlinearity of corticocortical inhibition cancels the nonlinear excitat
165 ether this localised hyperactivity is due to corticocortical inhibition or excess activity of inhibit
166 tatory synaptic drive and actively processes corticocortical input during behavior.
167 work reveals patterns of thalamocortical and corticocortical input unique to the auditory cortex.
168 erlaps PLST, indicating that PLST receives a corticocortical input, either directly or indirectly, fr
169 idal neurons, and relatively weak long-range corticocortical inputs and outputs.
170 works that receive topographically organized corticocortical inputs from distant sensorimotor areas,
171  have studied the distribution of reciprocal corticocortical inputs to pyramidal cells and gamma-amin
172                             These reciprocal corticocortical inputs to SI were concentrated in layer
173 lanted organoids receive thalamocortical and corticocortical inputs, and in vivo recordings of neural
174 been suggested as one possible mechanism for corticocortical interaction.
175  We conclude that interneuron-mediated S2-S1 corticocortical interactions are critical for efficient
176 ral sentence reading and analyzed long-range corticocortical interactions between local neural activa
177 r, little is known about the dynamics of the corticocortical interactions implementing these rapid an
178                           This suggests that corticocortical interactions, both within a hemisphere (
179 such networks have been explored in terms of corticocortical interactions, subcortical regions are li
180 s depends on large-scale thalamocortical and corticocortical interactions.
181  activity is mediated by mutually inhibitory corticocortical interactions.
182 at state transitions are coordinated through corticocortical interactions.
183 oss layers and projection classes, including corticocortical/intratelencephalic neurons (reciprocally
184                                              Corticocortical labeling with 1, 1''-dioleyl-3, 3, 3'',
185                                       In the corticocortical leg, S1 M1 connections from L2/3 and L5A
186 y motor cortex (M2), suggesting a functional corticocortical link from the RSC to M2 and thus a bridg
187                        However, whether such corticocortical loops exist remains unclear.
188                      In humans, the study of corticocortical motor networks is currently based on MRI
189 might represent specific settings within the corticocortical network and provide meaningful informati
190 s neurochemical changes in the supragranular corticocortical network to which these areas belong.
191 nctional connectivity of thalamocortical and corticocortical networks, particularly those involved in
192 ation by prolonged recruitment of long-range corticocortical networks.
193 tic transport of APP, we used a microfluidic corticocortical neuronal network-on-a-chip to examine AP
194      Corticostriatal neurons in layer 5A and corticocortical neurons (callosal projection neurons sim
195 om M2 monosynaptically excited M2-projecting corticocortical neurons in the RSC, especially in the su
196 regulates visual processing not only through corticocortical neurons projecting to the visual cortex
197 probability of feed-forward connections from corticocortical neurons to corticotectal neurons is appr
198 of layer V (CF5s), those of layer VI (CF6s), corticocortical neurons with ipsilateral projection (CCI
199 how that Cre-positive neurons are CT and not corticocortical or corticoclaustral types.
200 robability of monosynaptic connections among corticocortical or corticotectal cells.
201 l neurons is significantly higher than among corticocortical or corticotectal pyramidal neurons.
202 be implemented via top-down projections from corticocortical or neuromodulatory pathways.
203  cause of this hypoactivity may be defective corticocortical or thalamocortical connections.
204 ly outnumbered white-dominant neurons in the corticocortical output layers 2/3, but the numbers of bl
205  channeling information toward supragranular corticocortical output layers.
206                     We used a combination of corticocortical paired associative stimulation (ccPAS) t
207                              Here, by use of corticocortical paired associative transcranial magnetic
208 e that opposite STDP-like effects induced by corticocortical PAS are associated with increased commun
209 s connecting frontal and parietal regions: a corticocortical pathway and a subcortical pathway.
210 unction, underscoring its role as a critical corticocortical pathway linking the medial prefrontal, c
211                              When the direct corticocortical pathway was interrupted, secondary somat
212 ways, particularly the lemnisco-cortical and corticocortical pathways carrying tactile signals via th
213 imates, and concomitant with an expansion in corticocortical pathways compared with mice in adulthood
214                                              Corticocortical pathways interconnect cortical areas ext
215 e understanding of the role of transthalamic corticocortical pathways is to determine the nature of t
216 pathways, which ubiquitously parallel direct corticocortical pathways, but their role in sensory proc
217 ception by modulating corticosubcortical and corticocortical pathways.
218 messages carried through the well-documented corticocortical pathways.
219 inate multiple levels of thalamocortical and corticocortical processing to rapidly learn, and stably
220  frequency range consistent with distributed corticocortical processing, whereas responses to standar
221 al projection neurons (cCStrPNs) and crossed-corticocortical projection neurons (cCCPNs).
222 2 or Ctip2 can alter the axonal targeting of corticocortical projection neurons and cause them to pro
223 ies, underscoring the vulnerability of these corticocortical projection neurons during the onset and
224 e monkey neocortical pyramidal neurons: long corticocortical projection neurons from superior tempora
225 the distribution of neurofilament protein in corticocortical projection neurons in areas V1, V2, V3,
226  more subtle abnormalities, with the largest corticocortical projection neurons of layer IIIc express
227 ex can be classified into two major classes: corticocortical projection neurons, which are concentrat
228 ted to other distinctive properties of these corticocortical projection neurons.
229 s from V1; furthermore, any effect on direct corticocortical projections and local V1 circuitry would
230 by modulating network oscillations in S1 via corticocortical projections and subcortical feedforward
231 paradigm to characterize the organization of corticocortical projections from primary somatosensory (
232                                              Corticocortical projections from the dorsal and ventral
233 supports the view that the release of latent corticocortical projections from tonic inhibition throug
234 sis (ALS), and the preferential loss of long corticocortical projections in Alzheimer's disease (AD).
235 They also support the hypothesis that direct corticocortical projections in the brain are paralleled
236 esis, altered neuronal identity and aberrant corticocortical projections in the developing mouse brai
237                                              Corticocortical projections mainly terminated in the dor
238 mmediate neighboring barrel columns, whereas corticocortical projections reach the second somatosenso
239                                              Corticocortical projections targeted areas projected to
240                                       Septal corticocortical projections terminate in the dysgranular
241 may be a more important unifying feature for corticocortical projections than morphology.
242                                   Long-range corticocortical projections thus act through local micro
243                                              Corticocortical projections to the caudal and rostral ar
244 th the order observed in thalamocortical and corticocortical projections, and which characterizes all
245 understanding of these two components of the corticocortical projections, I studied the distribution
246 y impaired performance despite intact direct corticocortical projections, thus challenging the purely
247  drive multisensory functions as strongly as corticocortical projections.
248 ant component in the evolution of long-range corticocortical projections.
249 an SI and subsequently via intrahemispheric (corticocortical) projections to the SI hand region.
250  pathways to the primary visual cortex (V1): corticocortical, pulvinocortical, and cholinergic.
251                              We examined the corticocortical receptive field organization of resting-
252  connectivity following deafness may reflect corticocortical rewiring affording acoustically deprived
253 to interact with each other by multisynaptic corticocortical routes in strategy implementation.
254 e population has been suggested to determine corticocortical signaling efficacy, but others have argu
255  gamma remains unclear, and the influence on corticocortical signaling largely untested.
256 ough multiple downstream networks as in some corticocortical signaling schemes.
257  indirect neural network connections such as corticocortical, subcortical, or intrinsic spinal circui
258  including vestibular activity, is a typical corticocortical substrate of body motion.
259                       Do thalamocortical and corticocortical synapses differ in their plasticity and
260 se is required at thalamocortical but not at corticocortical synapses for building the whisker to bar
261 e explained either by synaptic depression in corticocortical synapses or by an inhibition-mediated su
262 rward thalamocortical gain while suppressing corticocortical synapses.
263 sting a possible causal relationship between corticocortical synchrony and localized increases in bet
264                           Notably, increased corticocortical synchrony between primary motor and prem
265 dent experiments to offer a viewpoint on how corticocortical systems contribute to learning and produ
266                                  The labeled corticocortical terminals in the primary motor (MI) and
267 mediodorsal thalamus (MDT) is a higher-order corticocortical thalamic nucleus involved in cognition a
268  of generalized anatomical rules to describe corticocortical, thalamocortical and corticothalamic pro
269 emporal to basal forebrain structures versus corticocortical tract disconnection.
270 rum imaging to compare anterior-to-posterior corticocortical tracts between primates and other mammal
271 ell as an expansion of anterior-to-posterior corticocortical tracts compared with other mammals.
272  increased bursting may be more important in corticocortical transmission than in transmission of pri
273 entially reflecting a greater sensitivity of corticocortical versus thalamocortical projections to th
274  functional connectivity is likely driven by corticocortical white matter connections but with comple
275  was used to construct white matter trees of corticocortical wiring.

 
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