scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Abnormal central visual pathways in the brain of an albino green monkey (Cercopithecus aethiops)

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The visual pathways of an albino green monkey have been studied electrophysiologically and by autoradiographic methods and it was possible to demonstrate a normal mapping of the contralateral visual field through the contalateral nasal retina and through the peripheral parts of the ipsilateral temporal retina.
Abstract
The visual pathways of an albino green monkey have been studied electrophysiologically and by autoradiographic methods. The monkey had a white coat and pink eyes; it had a strabismus and a nystagmus. When comparisons were made with normal macaque and green monkeys, several abnormalities could be defined. In the retina there was no foveal pit. A whole mount preparation showed a central area of high ganglion cell density in which the ganglion cells were significantly larger than the most central ganglion cells of a normal monkey. More peripheral retinal areas showed an apparently normal distribution of ganglion cell sizes and packing densities. Within the optic tract the number of uncrossed retinofugal fibers was less than normal, the part of the tract that represents central vision showing almost no uncrossed component. The uncrossed input to the lateral geniculate nucleus and to the superior colliculus was similarly reduced. Regions normally receiving ipsilateral afferents from the central retina were innervated exclusively by crossed afferents. The pathways to the magnocellular geniculate layers showed a more extensive abnormality than did the pathways to the parvicellular layers. Not only were the afferents to the geniculate layers abnormal, but the laminar pattern in the nucleus was also abnormal. The distinction between magno- and parvicellular layers was less clear than normal in some parts of the nucleus, and there were a number of abnormal laminar fusions. Within the visual cortex it was possible to demonstrate a normal mapping of the contralateral visual field through the contralateral nasal retina and through the peripheral parts of the ipsilateral temporal retina. The central parts of the temporal retina mapped abnormally in the contralateral visual cortex, so that there was a monocular map of the central parts of the visual field forming as a mirror reversal of the normal map. The normal map of the contralateral hemifield formed columns that alternated with the abnormal map of the ipsilateral hemifield. The peripheral parts of the visual field were represented as ocular dominance columns, demonstrable electrophysiologically and also by the transneuronal transport of 3H-proline.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Imaging retinotopic maps in the human brain

TL;DR: The characterization of human retinotopic maps from the last 25years is likely to be an important part of future ideas about visual computation, including white matter pathways, macroscopic properties of gray and white matter, and cellular and molecular tissue properties.
Journal ArticleDOI

Birth dates of retinal ganglion cells giving rise to the crossed and uncrossed optic projections in the mouse.

TL;DR: The conclusion that the bilateral projection system in the retina reflects an early developmental programme, and not the result of competition between the two eyes at later stages, was reinforced by observing a practically normal retinal origin of ipsilateral projections in mice which had only one normal eye from the earliest stages of eye development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chicken and egg.

TL;DR: The primary aim of this work was to establish an experimental procedure and show direct AFM-like responses in mice that are consistent with those of animals that secrete non-volatile substance into the brain during the development of the visual pathway.
Book

The history of neuroscience in autobiography

TL;DR: Previous Contributors Preface to Volume 1 Prefaced to Volume 6 Bernard W. Agranoff Emilio Bizzi Marian Cleeves Diamond Charles G. Gross Richard Held Leslie L. Iversen Masakazu Konishi Lawrence Kruger Susan E. Leeman Vernon B. Mountcastle Shigetada Nakanishi Solomon H. Snyder Nobuo Suga Hans Thoenen Index of Names.
Journal ArticleDOI

The albino retina: an abnormality that provides insight into normal retinal development

TL;DR: It is now possible to identify one candidate substance that emanates from the synthetic pathway of melanin that plays a key role in regulating retinal development.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Ferrier Lecture: Functional Architecture of Macaque Monkey Visual Cortex

TL;DR: In most respects the above description fits the newborn monkey just as well as the adult, suggesting that area 17 is largely genetically programmed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The autoradiographic demonstration of axonal connections in the central nervous system.

TL;DR: There are several reasons for thinking that this method may offer a number of advantages over other currently available techniques, and it should be possible to do this by locally injecting radioactively labeled precursors of proteins or other macromolecules into the brain or spinal cord.
Journal ArticleDOI

A method for measuring horizontal and vertical eye movement chronically in the monkey.

TL;DR: Eye movements are measured chronically in the monkey by surgically implanting a coil of fine wire upon the eyeball beneath the bulbar conjunctiva and recti insertions, making it possible to record eye movements conveniently and accurately in the experimental animal in longor short-term experiments on oculomotor function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ocular dominance columns and their development in layer IV of the cat's visual cortex: a quantitative study.

TL;DR: The distribution of geniculocortical afferents serving the left and right eyes was studied in abult cats and in kittens of various ages as discussed by the authors, and it was concluded that the earliest functional connections formed by geniculo-cortical inferents have a uniform, non-columnar arrangement in layer IV, and that the formation of the adult pattern is likely to involve the breakage and reformation of synaptic connections.
Journal ArticleDOI

Receptive-field organization of monkey superior colliculus.

TL;DR: Stryker et al. as discussed by the authors showed that lesions in the hamster superior colliculus can cause severe deficits in orienting to visual and auditory stimuli while leaving intact the ability to discriminate pat serns in situ.ations in which no orienting component is necessary for the successful performance.
Related Papers (5)