The Effect of Early Anomalous Visual Inputs on Orientation Selectivity

Perception ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
R V Abadi

It is now well established that the cortical neurones of cats and monkeys respond best to either lines or edges of a specific orientation. The respective tuning curves of these cells can be broadened by rearing the animals in abnormal visual environments during their critical period of development. Since neurones in the human visual system probably also possess this orientational selectivity, then it is not inconceivable that humans also could demonstrate similar orientational selectivity loss if they too have an anomalous visual input during their early years of life. To test this hypothesis, a simultaneous subthreshold masking technique is proposed as a means for assessing psychophysically the selectivity properties within the human striate cortex. Both visually normal and abnormal systems were considered. No selectivity loss is demonstrated for either the orientationally deprived (i.e. high astigmats) or monocular form deprived (high anisometrope) subjects. The effect of large eye movements (nystagmus) does, however, bring about a coarser selectivity. These results are discussed in relation to recent neurophysiological studies of the critical period in lower vertebrates.

2006 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 525-529 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Piccione ◽  
A. Costa ◽  
F. Fazio ◽  
F. Grasso ◽  
G. Caola

The maturation of nitrogen metabolism was studied in six Thoroughbred and six Arabian foals. Rectal temperature, heart and respiratory rates and serum concentration of several hematochemical parameters (total protein, urea, uric acid, creatinine, and albumine) were monitored from birth to 5 months of age. In both breeds, all the parameters except albumine showed significant differences over time (P<0.05). The two breeds did not differ from each other at any time point. Statistically significant decreases in urea and creatinine concentrations were related to the growth needs of foals during this critical period of development.


1972 ◽  
Vol 66 (9) ◽  
pp. 297-302
Author(s):  
John J. Knight

□ In summary: (1) Mannerisms are behaviors that the blind child uses to cope with tensions created by situations of frustration, fear, excitement, stimulation deficit, physical activity deprivation, insecurity, etc. (2) The blind child resorts to mannerisms, which are non-instrumental gross motor behaviors learned during early infancy, when he does not have a set of strong instrumental coping behaviors. (3) The blind child's lack of vision impedes the development of essential instrumental behaviors that are learned during infancy, such as reaching and crawling. (4) The blind infant must be given assistance which will enable him to develop each of his instrumental behaviors more completely, especially during the critical period of development for each behavior.


1963 ◽  
Vol 13 (51) ◽  
pp. 197-211
Author(s):  
Ranald Nicholson

While the reign of Edward II has long been recognised as a critical period in the historical development of Ireland, it is less well known that the early years of the reign of Edward III also represent a critical phase. As in the previous reign, the crisis was connected with Anglo-Scottish warfare. In 1315 it was the Scots under Edward Bruce who had taken the initiative and overrun Ireland. It was the Scots again who landed in Ulster in 1327, hoping once more to enlist Irish support for their cause. In the following year the dying Robert Bruce paid a last visit to Ulster, demonstrating in a peaceful yet forceful manner that the initiative still lay with the Scots. By 1335, Edward III had shown his qualities as a military commander and the situation had changed: an expedition set sail from Ireland to co-operate with the English in an invasion of Scotland.The details of this episode are of more than intrinsic interest. The surviving documents that record the organisation of the expedition illustrate the workings of the English dominion in Ireland in the crucial period following the Bruce invasions. Whether or not the expedition marked a restoration of royal authority in Ireland is a question that calls for an analysis of the events and circumstances that formed the background to the expedition of 1335.


1996 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. 1163-1176 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Hammond ◽  
J. N. Kim

1. Single binocularly driven complex neurons in cat striate cortex were recorded extracellularly under nitrous oxide-oxygen-halothane anesthesia and muscle relaxant. Orientational/directional tuning was initially derived for each eye in turn, with sine wave gratings of optimal spatial frequency and velocity, while the other eye viewed a uniform field. 2. For the dominant eye, previously concealed suppression was revealed against elevated levels of firing induced with a conditioning grating, drifting continuously in the preferred direction, simultaneously presented to the nondominant eye. During steady-state binocular conditioning, orientational/directional tuning was reestablished for the dominant eye. In a subset of cells, tuning curves during conditioning were also derived for the reverse configuration, i.e., nondominant eye tuning, dominant eye conditioning: results were qualitatively identical to those for conditioning through the nondominant eye. 3. Neurons were initially segregated into five groups, according to the observed suppression profiles induced at nonoptimal orientations/directions during conditioning: Type 1, suppression centered on orthogonal directions; Type 2, suppression around null directions; Type 3, null suppression combined with orthogonal suppression; Type 4, lateral suppression, maximal for directions immediately flanking those inducing excitation; and Type 5, the residue of cells, totally lacking suppression or showing complex or variable suppression. 4. Sharpness of (excitatory) tuning was correlated with directionality and with class of suppression revealed during binocular conditioning. Direction-biased neurons were more sharply orientation tuned than direction-selective neurons; similarly, neurons exhibiting lateral or orthogonal suppression during conditioning were more sharply tuned than neurons with null suppression. 5. Application of suboptimal directions of conditioning weakened the induced suppression but altered none of its main characteristics. 6. The relationship between excitation, suppression, and spatial frequency was investigated by comparing tuning curves for the dominant eye at several spatial frequencies, without and during conditioning. End-stopped neurons preferred lower spatial frequencies and higher velocities of motion than non-end-stopped neurons. Confirming previous reports, suppression in some neurons was still present for spatial frequencies above the cutoff frequency for excitation, demonstrating the tendency for suppression to be more broadly spatial frequency tuned than excitation. 7. Scatterplots of strength of suppression, in directions orthogonal and opposite maximal excitation, partially segregated neurons of Types 1-3. Clearer segregation of Types 1-4 was obtained by curve-fitting to profiles of suppression, and correlating half-width of tuning for suppression with the angle between the directions of optimal suppression and optimal excitation in each neuron. 8. Two interpretations are advanced-the first, based on three discrete classes of inhibition, orthogonal, null and lateral; the second, based on only two classes, orthogonal and null/lateral--in which null and lateral suppression are manifestations of the same inhibitory mechanism operating, respectively, on broadly tuned direction-selective or on sharply tuned direction-biased neurons. Orthogonal suppression may be untuned for direction, whereas lateral and null suppression are broadly direction tuned. Within each class, suppression is more broadly spatial frequency tuned than excitation. 9. It is concluded that orientational/directional selectivity of complex cells at different spatial frequencies is determined by the balance between tuned excitation and varying combinations of relatively broadly distributed or untuned inhibition.


Neuron ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 40 (6) ◽  
pp. 1147-1160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Todd McLaughlin ◽  
Christine L. Torborg ◽  
Marla B. Feller ◽  
Dennis D.M. O'Leary

1998 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 177-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. MCLEAN ◽  
L.A. PALMER

We have utilized an associative conditioning paradigm to induce changes in the receptive field (RF) properties of neurons in the adult cat striate cortex. During conditioning, the presentation of particular visual stimuli were repeatedly paired with the iontophoretic application of either GABA or glutamate to control postsynaptic firing rates. Similar paradigms have been used in kitten visual cortex to alter RF properties (Fregnac et al., 1988, 1992; Greuel et al., 1988; Shulz & Fregnac, 1992). Roughly half of the cells that were subjected to conditioning with stimuli differing in orientation were found to have orientation tuning curves that were significantly altered. In general, the modification in orientation tuning was not accompanied by a shift in preferred orientation, but rather, responsiveness to stimuli at or near the positively reinforced orientation was increased relative to controls, and responsiveness to stimuli at or near the negatively reinforced orientation was decreased relative to controls. A similar proportion of cells that were subjected to conditioning with stimuli differing in spatial phase were found to have spatial-phase tuning curves that were significantly modified. Conditioning stimuli typically differed by 90 deg in spatial phase, but modifications in spatial-phase angle were generally 30–40 deg. An interesting phenomenon we encountered was that during conditioning, cells often developed a modulated response to counterphased grating stimuli presented at the null spatial phase. We present an example of a simple cell for which the shift in preferred spatial phase measured with counterphased grating stimuli was comparable to the shift in spatial phase computed from a one-dimensional Gabor fit of the space-time RF profile. One of ten cells tested had a significant change in direction selectivity following associative conditioning. The specific and predictable modifications of RF properties induced by our associative conditioning procedure demonstrate the ability of mature visual cortical neurons to alter their integrative properties. Our results lend further support to models of synaptic plasticity where temporal correlations between presynaptic and postsynaptic activity levels control the efficiency of transmission at existing synapses, and to the idea that the mature visual cortex is, in some sense, dynamically organized.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen Wen ◽  
Yue Wang ◽  
Sheng He ◽  
Hong Liu ◽  
Chen Zhao ◽  
...  

Abnormal visual experience during critical period leads to reorganization of neuroarchitectures in primate visual cortex. However, developmental plasticity of human subcortical visual pathways remains elusive. Using high-resolution fMRI and pathway-selective visual stimuli, we investigated layer-dependent response properties and connectivity of subcortical visual pathways of adult human amblyopia. Stimuli presented to the amblyopic eye showed selective response loss in the parvocellular layers of the lateral geniculate nucleus, and also reduced the connectivity to V1. Amblyopic eye's response to isoluminant chromatic stimulus was significantly reduced in the superficial layers of the superior colliculus, while the fellow eye's response robustly increased in the deeper layers associated with increased cortical feedbacks. Therefore, amblyopia led to selective reduction of parvocellular feedforward signals in the geniculostriate pathway, whereas loss and enhancement of parvocellular feedback signals in the retinotectal pathway. These findings shed light for future development of new tools for treating amblyopia and tracking the prognosis.


2019 ◽  
Vol 44 (12) ◽  
pp. 1386-1392
Author(s):  
Hongmei Shi ◽  
Yanming Wang ◽  
Xuemei Liu ◽  
Lin Xia ◽  
Yao Chen ◽  
...  

1994 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 347-374 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. C. DeAngelis ◽  
R. D. Freeman ◽  
I. Ohzawa

1. The classically defined receptive field of a visual neuron is the area of visual space over which the cell responds to visual stimuli. It is well established, however, that the discharge produced by an optimal stimulus can be modulated by the presence of additional stimuli that by themselves do not produce any response. This study examines inhibitory influences that originate from areas located outside of the classical (i.e., excitatory) receptive field. Previous work has shown that for some cells the response to a properly oriented bar of light becomes attenuated when the bar extends beyond the receptive field, a phenomenon known as end-inhibition (or length tuning). Analogously, it has been shown that increasing the number of cycles of a drifting grating stimulus may also inhibit the firing of some cells, an effect known as side-inhibition (or width tuning). Very little information is available, however, about the relationship between end- and side-inhibition. We have examined the spatial organization and tuning characteristics of these inhibitory effects by recording extracellularly from single neurons in the cat's striate cortex (Area 17). 2. For each cortical neuron, length and width tuning curves were obtained with the use of rectangular patches of drifting sinusoidal gratings that have variable length and width. Results from 82 cells show that the strengths of end- and side-inhibition tend to be correlated. Most cells that exhibit clear end-inhibition also show a similar degree of side-inhibition. For these cells, the excitatory receptive field is surrounded on all sides by inhibitory zones. Some cells exhibit only end- or side-inhibition, but not both. Data for 28 binocular cells show that length and width tuning curves for the dominant and nondominant eyes tend to be closely matched. 3. We also measured tuning characteristics of end- and side-inhibition. To obtain these data, the excitatory receptive field was stimulated with a grating patch having optimal orientation, spatial frequency, and size, whereas the end- or side-inhibitory regions were stimulated with patches of gratings that had a variable parameter (such as orientation). Results show that end- and side-inhibition tend to be strongest at the orientation and spatial frequency that yield maximal excitation. However, orientation and spatial frequency tuning curves for inhibition are considerably broader than those for excitation, suggesting that inhibition is mediated by a pool of neurons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


1977 ◽  
Vol 40 (6) ◽  
pp. 1443-1443 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. I. Nelson ◽  
H. Kato ◽  
P. O. Bishop

Page 275: J. I. Nelson, H. Kato, and P. O. Bishop, “Discrimination of orientation and position disparities by binocularly activated neurons in cat striate cortex.” The legend to the figure at the bottom of page 325 should read: fig 9. Matrix stimulation experiment for a complex cell. The 17 position disparity tuning curves, separated from each other by orientation disparity increments of 7°, span an orientation range of 112°. Each position disparity tuning curve has six increments of 24' arc disparity spanning 2.4°. The stimulus orientation disparities were obtained by keeping the stimulus orientation for the left eye fixed at 112° and varying the orientation for the right eye. Monocular controls (open circles, filled triangles, and short continuous lines) same as for Fig. 8.


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