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Most input comes from collaterals of fibers passing through the thalamic reticular nucleus. The outputs from the primary thalamic reticular nucleus project to dorsal thalamic nuclei, but never to the cerebral cortex. [7] [8] This is the only thalamic nucleus that does not project to the cerebral cortex. Instead it modulates the information from ...
In fact, almost all thalamic neurons (with the notable exception of the thalamic reticular nucleus [6]) project to the cerebral cortex, and every region of the cortex so far studied has been found to innervate the thalamus. [7] Each of the thalami may be subdivided into at least 30 nuclei, giving a total of at least 60 for the whole thalamus ...
The term "reticular formation" was coined in the late 19th century by Otto Deiters, coinciding with Ramon y Cajal's neuron doctrine. Allan Hobson states in his book The Reticular Formation Revisited that the name is an etymological vestige from the fallen era of the aggregate field theory in the neural sciences.
medial dorsal nucleus of thalamus; nucleus raphe magnus and gigantocellular raphe nucleus → raphespinal tract → spinal trigeminal nucleus and posterior grey column of the spinal cord - the fibers of the tract terminate by forming excitatory serotonergic synapses with inhibitory enkephalinergic interneurons which in turn form inhibitory ...
parafascicular nucleus [22] lateral nuclear group [13] [23] is replaced by posterior region [24] pulvinar [25] anterior pulvinar nucleus [26] lateral pulvinar nucleus [27] medial pulvinar nucleus [28] inferior pulvinar nucleus [29] lateral posterior nucleus [30] belongs to pulvinar; lateral dorsal nucleus [31] (a.k.a. dorsal superficial nucleus ...
Parvocellular reticular nucleus, part of the brain located dorsolateral to the caudal pontine reticular nucleus; Reticulotegmental nucleus, an area within the floor of the midbrain; Thalamic reticular nucleus, part of the ventral thalamus that forms a capsule around the thalamus laterally; Ventral reticular nucleus, a continuation of the ...
This nucleus is located medially to the internal capsule, ventral to the thalamus, and is contiguous with the thalamic reticular nucleus. [6] The nucleus separates the lenticular fasciculus from the thalamic fasciculus (also known as the field H 1 of Forel.) Its cells are very heterogeneous differing widely in their shape and size.
In neuroanatomy, the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN; also called the lateral geniculate body or lateral geniculate complex) is a structure in the thalamus and a key component of the mammalian visual pathway. It is a small, ovoid, ventral projection of the thalamus where the thalamus connects with the optic nerve. There are two LGNs, one on the ...