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Singing behavior in the adult male zebra finch is dependent upon the activity of a cortical region known as HVC (proper name). The vast majority of HVC projection neurons send primary axons to either the downstream premotor nucleus RA (robust nucleus of the arcopallium, or primary motor cortex) or Area X (basal ganglia), which play important roles in song production or song learning, respectively. In addition to these long-range outputs, HVC neurons also send local axon collaterals throughout that nucleus. Despite their implications for a range of circuit models, these local processes have never been completely reconstructed. Here, we use in vivo single-neuron Neurobiotin fills to examine 40 projection neurons across 31 birds with somatic positions distributed across HVC. We show that HVC(RA) and HVC(X) neurons have categorically distinct dendritic fields. Additionally, these cell classes send axon collaterals that are either restricted to a small portion of HVC ("local neurons") or broadly distributed throughout the entire nucleus ("broadcast neurons"). Overall, these processes within HVC offer a structural basis for significant local processing underlying behaviorally relevant population activity.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1002/cne.24437

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2018-07-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

526

Pages

1673 - 1689

Total pages

16

Keywords

axon collaterals, premotor, sequence generation, songbird, vocal production, Animals, Axons, Dendrites, Finches, High Vocal Center, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Interneurons, Male, Motor Cortex, Motor Neurons, Neural Pathways, Presynaptic Terminals, Vocalization, Animal