a: olfactory bulb ~
b: thalamus

What:

"The mammalian olfactory system is unique in that sensory receptors synapse directly into the olfactory bulb of the forebrain without the thalamic relay that is common to all other sensory pathways. We argue that the olfactory bulb has an equivalent role to the thalamus, because the two regions have very similar structures and functions. Both the thalamus and the olfactory bulb are the final stage in sensory processing before reaching target cortical regions, at which there is a massive increase in neuron and synapse numbers. Thus, both structures act as a bottleneck that is a target for various modulatory inputs, and this arrangement enables efficient control of information flow before cortical processing occurs."


Useful?
Writer: Leslie M. Kay S. Murray Sherman
LCC:
Where:
Date: Oct 18 2016 4:51 PM


No critique for this page.
Feel free to be the first


Please review the linked page for context.
If you can think of something better than this,
please add it to the database

Name:
required
Contact:
(email or url) optional
Topic:
Comment:

This is an anti-spam device. Are you Human?

If so, please click the circle next to 'Yes' to submit your comment