Based on cytoarchitectonic criteria, the primate pulvinar
nucleus has been subdivided into medial (PM), lateral (PL),
and inferior (PI) regions. However, these subdivisions
show no correlation with those established by electrophysiological,
immunocytochemical, or neuroanatomical tracer studies.
In this work, we studied the connections of the pulvinar
nucleus of Cebus monkey with visual areas V1,
V2, V4, MT, and PO by means of retrograde fluorescent tracers
injected into these areas. Based on the projection zones
to cortical visual areas, the visual portion of the pulvinar
of Cebus monkey was subdivided into three subregions:
P1, P2, and P3, similar to those described in the macaque
(Ungerleider et al., 1984). In Cebus, P1 includes
the centrolateral portion of traditionally defined PI and
adjacent portion of PL. P2 is located in the dorsal portion
of PL and P3 includes the medial portion of PI and extends
dorsally into adjacent PL and PM. In addition, we studied
the histology of the pulvinar using multiple criteria,
such as cytoarchitecture and myeloarchitecture; histochemistry
for cytochrome oxidase, NADPH-diaphorase, and acetylcholinesterase;
and immunocytochemistry for two calcium-binding proteins,
calbindin and parvalbumin, and for a neurofilament recognized
by the SMI-32 antibody. Some of these stains, mainly calbindin,
showed additional subdivisions of the Cebus pulvinar,
beyond the traditional PI, PL, and PM. Based on this immunohistochemical
staining, the border of PI is moved dorsally above the
brachium of the superior colliculus and PI can be subdivided
in five regions (PIP, PIM, PIC,
PIL, and PILS). Regions P1, P2, and
P3 defined based on efferent connections with cortical
visual areas are not architectonically/neurochemically
homogeneous. Rather they appear to consist of further chemoarchitectonic
subdivisions. These distinct histochemical regions might
be related to different functional modules of visual processing
within one connectional area.