Corinna Darian-Smith
Title
Assistant Professor
Department
Comparative Medicine
Research Interests
Somatosensory and motor pathway organization in adult primates, hand
function, systemic responses to focal injury affecting hand function.
Email
corinna.darian-smith@stanford.edu
Phone
736-0969
Fax
498-6259
Address
300 Pasteur Drive
Edwards Building Room R106
Mail Code: 5330
Faculty Research Description
The research focus in my laboratory falls into two main areas: (1) the
organization and function of somatosensory and motor pathways underlying
directed manual behavior, and (2) the capacity of these pathways to compensate/adapt
following localized injury. We are particularly interested in the primate
and the macaque monkey, where hand function and the central neuronal pathways
mediating fine finger control, closely approximate that of the human.
We use a combination of behavioral, neuroanatomical and electrophysiological
approaches to examine specific questions relating to sensorimotor organization
and reorganization in the adult system.
Darian-Smith C, Gilbert CD. (1994) Axonal sprouting accompanies functional
reorganization in adult cat striate cortex. Nature. 368:737-40
Darian-Smith C, Gilbert CD. (1995) Topographic reorganization in the striate
cortex of the adult cat and monkey is cortically mediated. J Neurosci.
15:1631-47.
Darian-Smith I, Galea MP, Darian-Smith C, Sugitani M, Tan A & Burman K.
(1996) The anatomy of manual dexterity: the new connectivity of the primate
sensorimotor thalamus and cerebral cortex. In: Advances in Anatomy, Embryology
and Cell Biology. Vol. 133: 1-141. Springer: Berlin.
Darian-Smith C, Tan A, Edwards S. (1999) Comparing thalamocortical and
corticothalamic microstructure and spatial reciprocity in the macaque
ventral posterolateral nucleus (VPLc) and medial pulvinar. J Comp Neurol.
410:211-34.
Darian-Smith C, Brown S. (2000) Functional changes at periphery and cortex
following dorsal root lesions in adult monkeys. Nat Neurosci. 3:476-81.
Areas of Study
Systems Neurobiology
Adult Neuronal Plasticity
SBRC
|