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Visual interhemispheric transfer to areas 17 and 18 in cats with convergent strabismus
Author(s) -
Milleret Chantal,
Houzel JeanChristophe
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
european journal of neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1460-9568
pISSN - 0953-816X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2001.01360.x
Subject(s) - meridian (astronomy) , strabismus , corpus callosum , cats , commissure , neuroscience , receptive field , visual cortex , white matter , visual field , psychology , anatomy , medicine , physics , magnetic resonance imaging , radiology , astronomy
Commissural connections between primary visual cortical maps of the two hemispheres are essential to unify the split representation of the visual field. In normal adult cats, callosal connections are essentially restricted to the border between areas A17 and A18, where the central vertical meridian is projected. In contrast, early convergent strabismus leads to an expanded callosal‐receiving zone, as repeatedly indicated by anatomical experiments. We investigated here the functional correlates of this widespread distribution of callosal terminals by analysing transcallosal visual responses in five anaesthetized and paralysed 4–10‐month‐old cats whose right eye had been surgically deviated on postnatal day 6. After acute section of the optic chiasm, single‐unit activity was recorded from A17 and A18 of the right hemisphere while the left eye was visually stimulated. A total of 108/406 units were transcallosally activated. While they were more frequent at the 17/18 border (46% of the units recorded within this region), numerous transcallosally activated units were located throughout A17 (16%), A18 (27%) or within the white matter (17%). In all regions, transcallosally driven units displayed functional deficits usually associated with strabismus, such as decreased binocularity and ability to respond to fast‐moving stimuli, and increased receptive field size. Many units also displayed reduced orientation selectivity and increased position disparity. In addition, transcallosal receptive fields were manifestly located within the hemifield ipsilateral to the explored cortex, with almost no contact with the central vertical meridian. Comparison with data from normal adults revealed that strabismus induced a considerable expansion of the callosal receiving zone, both in terms of the cortical region and of the extent of the visual field involved in interhemispheric transfer, with implications in the integration of visual information across the hemispheres.

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