Loading…
Responsiveness of cat area 17 after monocular inactivation: limitation of topographic plasticity in adult cortex
1. Recordings were made from neurones in the splenial sulcus of normal adult cats and adult cats which had one eye inactivated by enucleation or photocoagulation of the optic disc. Two visually responsive regions were observed, corresponding to the peripheral representation of visual area 1 (V1) and...
Saved in:
Published in: | The Journal of physiology 1995-02, Vol.482 (Pt 3), p.589-608 |
---|---|
Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Summary: | 1. Recordings were made from neurones in the splenial sulcus of normal adult cats and adult cats which had one eye inactivated
by enucleation or photocoagulation of the optic disc. Two visually responsive regions were observed, corresponding to the
peripheral representation of visual area 1 (V1) and the splenial visual area. In normal animals, responses to the ipsilateral
eye in V1 were restricted to the medial half of the splenial sulcus, up to 45-50 deg eccentricity. Thus, by inactivating the
eye contralateral to the experimental hemisphere, we created a region in V1, 1-2 mm wide, that lacked normal inputs. 2. In
contrast to results from previous experiments where lesions were placed in the central retina, neurones in the deprived peripheral
representation remained unresponsive to light stimuli for up to 12 h after deactivation of the contralateral eye. 3. In animals
that were allowed to recover from the monocular deactivation for periods of 2 days to 16 months, there was rearrangement of
the retinotopic maps. Receptive fields in regions of cortex that normally represented the monocular crescent were displaced
to the temporal border of the binocular field of vision. However, most neurones in the deprived peripheral representation
remained unresponsive to visual stimuli even more than 1 year after treatment. This is also in marked contrast with the extensive
reorganization that is observed in the central representation of V1 after restricted retinal lesions. Analysis of the cortical
magnification factor demonstrates that the change in visual topography is local, and does not involve an overall centro-peripheral
shift of the retinotopic map. 4. Among the neurones that did show displaced receptive fields, the response properties were
clearly abnormal. They showed a notable lack of spontaneous activity, low firing rates and rapid habituation to repeated stimulation.
5. The low potential for reorganization of the monocular sector of V1 demonstrates that the capacity for plasticity of mature
sensory representations varies with location in cortex. Even relatively small pieces of cortex, such as the monocular crescent
representations, may not reorganize completely if certain conditions are not met. These results suggest the existence of natural
boundaries that may limit the process of reorganization of sensory representations. |
---|---|
ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1995.sp020543 |