“…In various mammalian species (Pasik et al, 1976; Chung et al, 1977; Hassler et al, 1978; Roberts et al, 1995a, b) including human (Roberts et al, 1996), the majority of synapses present in the striatum form asymmetric synapses, characteristic of excitatory synaptic transmission. The terminals forming these synapses originate predominantly from neurons in the cortex (Kemp and Powell, 1971a, b, c), with less extensive inputs arising from the thalamus (Kemp and Powell, 1971a, b, c; Sadikot et al, 1992a, b; Smith et al, 1994) and the raphe (LaVoie and Parent, 1990).…”