Journal of neurophysiology
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Sensorimotor response properties of neostriatal neurons were characterized in conjunction with assessments of the motor effects of intrastriatal microstimulation in unanesthetized rhesus monkeys. Neuronal activity and microexcitability were assessed at 250- to 500-micron intervals and, in some cases, at 25- to 100-micron intervals. The results are based on the functional characterization of 878 putamen and 224 caudate neurons and analysis of the effects of microstimulation at each of these recording sites. ⋯ Moreover, a close correspondence was observed between the movements evoked from a given SMZ and the functional properties of local neurons. In contrast to the results obtained in the putamen, none of the 224 stimulation sites in the caudate nucleus was microexcitable, and only 17 (7.6%) of the caudate neurons had definable sensorimotor response properties. This is consistent with the view that the primate putamen, by virtue of its anatomic connections with the sensorimotor and premotor cortical fields, is more directly involved in motor functions, whereas the caudate nucleus, by virtue of its connections with cortical "association" areas, is involved in more complex behavioral functions.