The primate visual system after bilateral removal of striate cortex |
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Authors: | J. Dineen E. G. Keating |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Anatomy and Neurology, SUNY — Upstate Medical Center and Neurology Service of the Veterans Hospital, 13210 Syracuse, NY, USA;(2) Dept. of Ophthalmology, RJ-10, University of Washington, 98195 Seattle, WA, USA |
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Abstract: | Summary This study examined the strategies used by monkeys lacking striate cortex to perform visual pattern discriminations. Complete bilateral removal of area 17 initially produced severe visual impairment with recovery of even rudimentary visual capacities (e.g., flux discrimination) dependent on gradually retraining the monkeys through a set of increasingly more complex pattern discriminations. After extended periods of postoperative testing, however, three of five monkeys lacking striate cortex were able to discriminate a number of complex visual patterns even when such local stimulus cues as amount of contour and number of elements were equal. Further testing demonstrated that these animals could distinguish a pattern's spatial organization. They were also able to transfer good performance to tasks with novel patterns.This work was supported by USPHS Grants NS 10576 and EY 02941, and by the Veteran's Administration Research Service to E. G. Keating |
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Keywords: | Striate lesions Visual cortex Extrastriate vision Pattern vision Primate visual system |
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