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      The mammalian superior colliculus: laminar structure and connections.

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      Progress in brain research
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          The superior colliculus is a laminated midbrain structure that acts as one of the centers organizing gaze movements. This review will concentrate on sensory and motor inputs to the superior colliculus, on its internal circuitry, and on its connections with other brainstem gaze centers, as well as its extensive outputs to those structures with which it is reciprocally connected. This will be done in the context of its laminar arrangement. Specifically, the superficial layers receive direct retinal input, and are primarily visual sensory in nature. They project upon the visual thalamus and pretectum to influence visual perception. These visual layers also project upon the deeper layers, which are both multimodal, and premotor in nature. Thus, the deep layers receive input from both somatosensory and auditory sources, as well as from the basal ganglia and cerebellum. Sensory, association, and motor areas of cerebral cortex provide another major source of collicular input, particularly in more encephalized species. For example, visual sensory cortex terminates superficially, while the eye fields target the deeper layers. The deeper layers are themselves the source of a major projection by way of the predorsal bundle which contributes collicular target information to the brainstem structures containing gaze-related burst neurons, and the spinal cord and medullary reticular formation regions that produce head turning.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Prog Brain Res
          Progress in brain research
          Elsevier BV
          1875-7855
          0079-6123
          2006
          : 151
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Anatomy, University of Mississippi Medical Center, 2500 North State Street, Jackson, MS 39216, USA. pmay@anatomy.umsmed.edu
          Article
          S0079-6123(05)51011-2
          10.1016/S0079-6123(05)51011-2
          16221594
          07229f58-88c1-46bc-98f5-b2a832bebdd8
          History

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