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Kathleen R. Zahs

Researcher at University of California, San Francisco

Publications -  9
Citations -  1076

Kathleen R. Zahs is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Visual cortex & Lateral geniculate nucleus. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 9 publications receiving 1040 citations.

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Relation of cortical cell orientation selectivity to alignment of receptive fields of the geniculocortical afferents that arborize within a single orientation column in ferret visual cortex.

TL;DR: Results are consistent with the Hubel and Wiesel (1962) model for the construction of oriented visual cortical receptive fields from geniculate inputs with aligned receptive fields.
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The critical period for ocular dominance plasticity in the Ferret's visual cortex.

TL;DR: Analysis of the effects of 7 d and longer deprivations revealed a second period of plasticity in cortical responses in which MD induced an effect like that of strabismus, which was compared to other features of development in ferret and cat.
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Organization of primary visual cortex (area 17) in the ferret.

TL;DR: Anatomical and electrophysiological mapping techniques were used to determine topographic organization and arrangement of ocular dominance columns in the primary visual cortex of ferrets.
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On and off sublaminae in the lateral geniculate nucleus of the ferret

TL;DR: In the ferret, there is a sublamination of the retinal input to lateral geniculate nucleus laminae A and A1 and the function is investigated by making microelectrode recordings and it is found that each sublamina consists of geniculated neurons of a single center type.
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Segregation of ON and OFF afferents to ferret visual cortex.

TL;DR: Surface-mapping results and the results of experiments in which electrode penetrations were made tangential to layer IV indicated that center- type patches can extend over several hundred micrometers, and a Monte Carlo analysis of the sizes of the ocular dominance patches and center-type patches provided further support for this conclusion.