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Journal ArticleDOI

Visual receptive field properties of cells innervated through the corpus callosum in the cat.

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TLDR
The receptive field (R.F.) properties of cortical cells which receive part of their input from the contralateral hemisphere via the corpus callosum were examined, finding that in the normal cat, simple, complex and hypercomplex type R.F.'s were found, whereas no callosally activated cell was of the simple type.
Abstract
The present experiment examined the receptive field (R.F.) properties of cortical cells which receive part of their input from the contralateral hemisphere via the corpus callosum. Two groups of cats were used for recording unit activity: a normal control group, and an experimental group consisting of cats which had their optic chiasmas split across the midline prior to the recording sessions. Acute recordings were carried out in the conventional manner using tungsten microelectrodes and N2O: O2 anaesthesia. The recording site was the 17–18 border. The stimulus consisted of a thin bar generated on an oscilloscope screen by a computer. The bar, whose orientation was varied automatically from 0 ° to 345 ° in 15 ° steps, was swept across the screen at constant speed orthogonal to the orientation. Various R.F. properties were studied using both quantitative and qualitative criteria. Thus, in the normal cat, simple, complex and hypercomplex type R.F.'s were found, whereas no callosally activated cell was of the simple type. The ocular dominance distribution found in the split chiasma cat was skewed towards the ipsilateral eye, although a fairly large number of cells could be driven with the two eyes. The R.F.'s of the callosally activated neurons were all situated close to the vertical meridian, which they sometimes straddled. Both in the normal and in the chiasma sectioned cats, the complex cells had larger R.F.'s than the other cell types. However, the R.F.'s determined through the ipsilateral eye was essentially of the same dimensions as those obtained through the indirect interhemispheric pathway, and this irrespective of cell type. Orientation specificity was similar for the two eyes in the split chiasma cats as it was for the normal cats although in the former the orientation tuning curve was narrower for the callosal pathway than for the more direct thalamo-cortical pathway. The results are interpreted within the context of the different functions ascribed to the corpus callosum in vision.

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI

General Organization of Callosal Connections in the Cerebral Cortex

TL;DR: The necessity of interhemispheric connections, and the nature of this necessity, are demonstrated by the following hypothetical event: an intelligent being from outer space lands on earth and is asked to design the brain of a cat as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional Specificity of Long-Range Intrinsic and Interhemispheric Connections in the Visual Cortex of Strabismic Cats

TL;DR: It is shown that strabismus does not interfere with the tendency of long-range horizontal fibers to link predominantly neurons of similar orientation preference, and that the selection mechanisms for the stabilization of callosal connections are similar to those that are responsible for the specification of the tangential intrinsic connections.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visual Stimulus–Dependent Changes in Interhemispheric EEG Coherence in Ferrets

TL;DR: The results suggest that the activation of cortico-cortical connections can indeed be revealed as a change in EEG coherence, and the latter can therefore be validly used to investigate the functionality of cortICO-cortsical connections.
Journal ArticleDOI

Representation of the ipsilateral visual field in the transition zone between areas 17 and 18 of the cat's cerebral cortex.

TL;DR: The results show that the transition zone contains a significant representation of the ipsilateral visual hemifield although not all elevations in the visual field are represented to the same extent, and suggests that the zone may have connections distinctly different from those of the adjacent areas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cellular aspects of callosal connections and their development

TL;DR: Detailed visualization, three-dimensional reconstruction, and quantification of individual callosal axons interconnecting the visual areas 17 and 18 of the cat was undertaken in order to clarify the structural basis for interhemispheric interaction, and generated the notion of macro- vs micro-organization of callosal connections.
References
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Book

Statistical Principles in Experimental Design

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce the principles of estimation and inference: means and variance, means and variations, and means and variance of estimators and inferors, and the analysis of factorial experiments having repeated measures on the same element.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical Principles in Experimental Design

TL;DR: This chapter discusses design and analysis of single-Factor Experiments: Completely Randomized Design and Factorial Experiments in which Some of the Interactions are Confounded.
Journal ArticleDOI

Receptive fields, binocular interaction and functional architecture in the cat's visual cortex

TL;DR: This method is used to examine receptive fields of a more complex type and to make additional observations on binocular interaction and this approach is necessary in order to understand the behaviour of individual cells, but it fails to deal with the problem of the relationship of one cell to its neighbours.
Journal ArticleDOI

Receptive fields and functional architecture in two nonstriate visual areas (18 and 19) of the cat.

TL;DR: To UNDERSTAND VISION in physiological terms represents a formidable problem for the biologist, and one approach is to stimulate the retina with patterns of light while recording from single cells or fibers at various points along the visual pathway.
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