Acute lesions of primary visual cortical areas in adult cats inactivate responses of neurons in higher visual cortices.
2013
Psychophysical studies suggest that lateral extrastriate visual
cortical areas in cats may mediate the sparing of vision largely by
network reorganization following lesions of early visual cortical
areas. To date, however, there is little direct physiological evidence
to support this hypothesis. Using in vivo single-unit recording
techniques, we examined the response of neurons in areas 19, 21, and 20
to different types of visual stimulation in cats with or without acute
bilateral lesions in areas 17 and 18. Our results showed that, relative
to the controls, acute lesions inactivated the response of 99.3% of
neurons to moving gratings and 93% of neurons to flickering square
stimuli in areas 19, 21, and 20. These results indicated that acute
lesions of primary visual areas in adult cats may impair most visual
abilities. Sparing of vision in cats with neonatal lesions in early
visual cortical areas may result largely from a postoperative
reorganization of visual pathways from subcortical nucleus to
extrastriate visual cortical areas.
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