Literature DB >> 681993

Physiological consequences for the cat's visual cortex of effectively restricting early visual experience with oriented contours.

M P Stryker, H Sherk, A G Leventhal, H V Hirsch.   

Abstract

1. The early visual experience of nine cats was restricted to viewing horizontal or vertical lines inside opaque goggles. 2. When the kittens were 3-4 mo old, extracellular recordings were made in the primary visual cortex. To obtain a representative sample of cortical cells, units were studied at regularly spaced intervals along the course of electrode penetrations traveling oblique to the cortical surface. An automated assessment of preferred orientation using a computer-driven optical display was employed, and during the recording session the experimenters did not know which orientation(s) each animal had viewed in early life. 3. In the cats that viewed horizontal lines with one eye and vertical lines with the other during rearing, two major findings of previous workers (14) were confirmed. First, a majority of units were not selective for orientation. Second, units with preferred orientations near vertical tended to be activated exclusively by the eye that had viewed vertical, and likewise for horizontal. 4. In cats that viewed lines of the same orientation with both eyes during rearing, a substantially smaller proportion of units were selective for orientation; the preferred orientations of these units also tended to match the orientation to which the cats had been exposed. 5. Portions of some electrode penetrations showed an orderly arrangement of cells according to preferred orientation similar to that seen in normal cats, but with regions over which only nonselective cells were found. Many penetrations appeared less orderly. 6. The results are consistent with a role for early visual experience in maintaining the responsiveness and innate selectivity of cortical neurons, although they cannot entirely rule out the possibility that experience may alter or determine the preferred orientation of some cells.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1978        PMID: 681993     DOI: 10.1152/jn.1978.41.4.896

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


  35 in total

1.  Structured long-range connections can provide a scaffold for orientation maps.

Authors:  H Z Shouval; D H Goldberg; J P Jones; M Beckerman; L N Cooper
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2000-02-01       Impact factor: 6.167

Review 2.  The missing piece in the 'use it or lose it' puzzle: is inhibition regulated by activity or does it act on its own accord?

Authors:  Qian-Quan Sun
Journal:  Rev Neurosci       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 4.353

3.  Centrifugal motion bias in the cat's lateral suprasylvian visual cortex is independent of early flow field exposure.

Authors:  E Brenner; J P Rauschecker
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  1990-04       Impact factor: 5.182

4.  Analysis of the visual spatiotemporal properties of American Sign Language.

Authors:  Rain G Bosworth; Charles E Wright; Karen R Dobkins
Journal:  Vision Res       Date:  2019-09-23       Impact factor: 1.886

5.  Role for Visual Experience in the Development of Direction-Selective Circuits.

Authors:  Rémi Bos; Christian Gainer; Marla B Feller
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2016-05-05       Impact factor: 10.834

6.  Development of orientation preference maps in ferret primary visual cortex.

Authors:  B Chapman; M P Stryker; T Bonhoeffer
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  1996-10-15       Impact factor: 6.167

7.  Development of cortical orientation selectivity in the absence of visual experience with contour.

Authors:  Tomokazu Ohshiro; Shaista Hussain; Michael Weliky
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2011-07-13       Impact factor: 2.714

8.  Visual scenes and cortical neurons: what you see is what you get.

Authors:  E M Callaway
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1998-03-31       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Structural study of the development of ocularity domains using a neural network model.

Authors:  M A Andrade; F Morán
Journal:  Biol Cybern       Date:  1996-03       Impact factor: 2.086

Review 10.  Development and plasticity of the primary visual cortex.

Authors:  J Sebastian Espinosa; Michael P Stryker
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2012-07-26       Impact factor: 17.173

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.