crossinhibition
Crossinhibition, sometimes written cross-inhibition, is a phenomenon in which activation of one pathway, response, or cellular state suppresses the activity of a competing pathway, response, or state. It can occur between neural circuits, muscle groups, signaling pathways, or gene regulatory networks. The suppression may be direct, via inhibitory synapses, or indirect, through shared resources, feedback loops, or transcriptional cross-talk.
In the nervous system, crossinhibition is a form of reciprocal inhibition. Activation of a motor pool often
In cellular signaling and gene regulation, crossinhibition can arise when two pathways compete for limited second
Crossinhibition is related to, but distinct from, lateral inhibition, which emphasizes spatial contrast in sensory arrays.