Reversal of the physiological effects of brief periods of monocular deprivation in the kitten. 1978

R C van Sluyters

1. Five normally reared kittens were monocularly deprived from day 32 to day 42 and then subjected to varying periods (from 6 to 14 days) of deprivation reversal using the technique of reverse suturing. Data obtained from single unit recordings in striate cortex of these kittens were compared to control data from seven normal kittens (aged 32 days to 22.5 weeks) and three normally reared kittens given monocular deprivation from day 32 to day 42. 2. Analysis of cortical ocular dominance patterns in these reverse-sutured kittens revealed a progressively greater shift of influence away from the originally experienced eye and toward the originally deprived eye as the duration of the period of deprivation reversal increased. Most cortical cells were monocularly driven in these animals, but at each stage of the reversal process some binocular neurones were found. 3. The distribution of interocular differences in preferred orientation for binocular cells from these kittens was not significantly different from that for normal kittens, indicating that the pattern of connexions established by the originally deprived eye during reinnervation of striate cortex was very similar to that present before deprivation. 4. Previous studies on reversal of the effects of longer periods of monocular deprivation have indicated that during reinnervation of cortex by fibres representing the originally deprived eye an entirely new and different pattern of connexions is formed. On the basis of these results, it is hypothesized that short-term monocular deprivation causes a reversible silencing of otherwise intact synapses, while terminals are physically disrupted when deprivation is prolonged. 5. This hypothesis is supported by the results of an additional set of experiments in which receptive fields, many of which were highly specific, could be demonstrated for about one-half of the cells studied after removal of the non-deprived eye in two normally reared kittens given 10 days of monocular deprivation beginning on day 32. Similar experiments in two kittens deprived from eye opening to day 42 revealed functional input to less than 20% of the cells studied and no evidence of response specificity.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D009474 Neurons The basic cellular units of nervous tissue. Each neuron consists of a body, an axon, and dendrites. Their purpose is to receive, conduct, and transmit impulses in the NERVOUS SYSTEM. Nerve Cells,Cell, Nerve,Cells, Nerve,Nerve Cell,Neuron
D002415 Cats The domestic cat, Felis catus, of the carnivore family FELIDAE, comprising over 30 different breeds. The domestic cat is descended primarily from the wild cat of Africa and extreme southwestern Asia. Though probably present in towns in Palestine as long ago as 7000 years, actual domestication occurred in Egypt about 4000 years ago. (From Walker's Mammals of the World, 6th ed, p801) Felis catus,Felis domesticus,Domestic Cats,Felis domestica,Felis sylvestris catus,Cat,Cat, Domestic,Cats, Domestic,Domestic Cat
D004292 Dominance, Cerebral Dominance of one cerebral hemisphere over the other in cerebral functions. Cerebral Dominance,Hemispheric Specialization,Dominances, Cerebral,Specialization, Hemispheric
D000344 Afferent Pathways Nerve structures through which impulses are conducted from a peripheral part toward a nerve center. Afferent Pathway,Pathway, Afferent,Pathways, Afferent
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia
D012193 Reversal Learning Any situation where an animal or human is trained to respond differentially to two stimuli (e.g., approach and avoidance) under reward and punishment conditions and subsequently trained under reversed reward values (i.e., the approach which was previously rewarded is punished and vice versa). Learning, Reversal,Learnings, Reversal,Reversal Learnings
D012683 Sensory Deprivation The absence or restriction of the usual external sensory stimuli to which the individual responds. Deprivation, Sensory,Deprivations, Sensory,Sensory Deprivations
D014785 Vision, Ocular The process in which light signals are transformed by the PHOTORECEPTOR CELLS into electrical signals which can then be transmitted to the brain. Vision,Light Signal Transduction, Visual,Ocular Vision,Visual Light Signal Transduction,Visual Phototransduction,Visual Transduction,Phototransduction, Visual,Transduction, Visual
D014793 Visual Cortex Area of the OCCIPITAL LOBE concerned with the processing of visual information relayed via VISUAL PATHWAYS. Area V2,Area V3,Area V4,Area V5,Associative Visual Cortex,Brodmann Area 18,Brodmann Area 19,Brodmann's Area 18,Brodmann's Area 19,Cortical Area V2,Cortical Area V3,Cortical Area V4,Cortical Area V5,Secondary Visual Cortex,Visual Cortex Secondary,Visual Cortex V2,Visual Cortex V3,Visual Cortex V3, V4, V5,Visual Cortex V4,Visual Cortex V5,Visual Cortex, Associative,Visual Motion Area,Extrastriate Cortex,Area 18, Brodmann,Area 18, Brodmann's,Area 19, Brodmann,Area 19, Brodmann's,Area V2, Cortical,Area V3, Cortical,Area V4, Cortical,Area V5, Cortical,Area, Visual Motion,Associative Visual Cortices,Brodmanns Area 18,Brodmanns Area 19,Cortex Secondary, Visual,Cortex V2, Visual,Cortex V3, Visual,Cortex, Associative Visual,Cortex, Extrastriate,Cortex, Secondary Visual,Cortex, Visual,Cortical Area V3s,Extrastriate Cortices,Secondary Visual Cortices,V3, Cortical Area,V3, Visual Cortex,V4, Area,V4, Cortical Area,V5, Area,V5, Cortical Area,V5, Visual Cortex,Visual Cortex Secondaries,Visual Cortex, Secondary,Visual Motion Areas

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