The mouse posterior parietal cortex: Anatomy and functions

•A review of the literature on the mouse parietal cortex (PPC) is proposed.•The discussion focuses on the anatomy and function of PPC.•The role of PPC for single- and multimodal stimulus encoding is discussed.•PPC role in navigation and choice-related activity is also reviewed. In recent years, the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience research 2019-03, Vol.140, p.14-22
Hauptverfasser: Lyamzin, Dmitry, Benucci, Andrea
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•A review of the literature on the mouse parietal cortex (PPC) is proposed.•The discussion focuses on the anatomy and function of PPC.•The role of PPC for single- and multimodal stimulus encoding is discussed.•PPC role in navigation and choice-related activity is also reviewed. In recent years, the number of studies on decision-making in mice has increased dramatically. Many of these studies focus on the posterior parietal cortex (PPC), an area that has been implicated in sensory and multisensory processing, navigation, motion planning, and decision-making. In this review we summarize recent anatomical and functional studies of mouse PPC. First, we make a note of the existing variability in the nomenclature and its anatomical localization. Based on the commonalities across different studies we then describe the connectivity of PPC and discuss its place within several functional brain networks. In view of the examined connectivity, we go on to discuss the role of PPC for the encoding of single-modality and multimodal stimuli as well as its role in navigation. Finally, we summarize the literature on the choice-related activity: we discuss the variety of behavioral protocols and sensory modalities used in these studies, and we note that the response properties of PPC and its causal involvement in decision-making may depend substantially on these conditions. We conclude that, although more research should be devoted to creating a more complete and consistent image of the mouse PPC, this area should rightfully be considered a convenient model system for a circuit-level understanding of the mammalian parietal cortex.
ISSN:0168-0102
1872-8111
DOI:10.1016/j.neures.2018.10.008