TY - JOUR
T1 - Correlated binocular activity guides recovery from monocular deprivation
AU - Kind, Peter C.
AU - Mitchell, Donald E.
AU - Ahmed, Bashir
AU - Blakemore, Colin
AU - Bonhoeffer, Tobias
AU - Sengpiel, Frank
PY - 2002/3/28
Y1 - 2002/3/28
N2 - Monocular deprivation (MD) has much more rapid and severe effects on the ocular dominance of neurons in the primary visual cortex (VI) than does binocular deprivation.This finding underlies the widely held hypothesis that the developmental plasticity of ocular dominance reflects competitive interactions for synaptic space between inputs from the two eyes. According to this view, the relative levels of evoked activity in afferents representing the two eyes determine functional changes in response to altered visual experience. However, if the deprived eye of a monocularly deprived kitten is simply reopened, there is substantial physiological and behavioural recovery, leading to the suggestion that absolute activity levels, or some other non-competitive mechanisms, determine the degree of recovery from MD. Here we provide evidence that correlated binocular input is essential for such recovery. Recovery is far less complete if the two eyes are misaligned after a period of MD. This is a powerful demonstration of the importance of cooperative, associative mechanisms in the developing visual cortex.
AB - Monocular deprivation (MD) has much more rapid and severe effects on the ocular dominance of neurons in the primary visual cortex (VI) than does binocular deprivation.This finding underlies the widely held hypothesis that the developmental plasticity of ocular dominance reflects competitive interactions for synaptic space between inputs from the two eyes. According to this view, the relative levels of evoked activity in afferents representing the two eyes determine functional changes in response to altered visual experience. However, if the deprived eye of a monocularly deprived kitten is simply reopened, there is substantial physiological and behavioural recovery, leading to the suggestion that absolute activity levels, or some other non-competitive mechanisms, determine the degree of recovery from MD. Here we provide evidence that correlated binocular input is essential for such recovery. Recovery is far less complete if the two eyes are misaligned after a period of MD. This is a powerful demonstration of the importance of cooperative, associative mechanisms in the developing visual cortex.
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U2 - 10.1038/416430a
DO - 10.1038/416430a
M3 - RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal
C2 - 11919632
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 416
SP - 430
EP - 433
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
IS - 6879
ER -