The effect of inferotemporal lesions on memory for visual stimuli in rhesus monkeys

1974 ◽  
Vol 77 (3) ◽  
pp. 451-469 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Dean
1965 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 395-398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hugh Brown ◽  
F. W. Remfry ◽  
W. C. Bass

Two rhesus monkeys were trained in an operant situation to perform for food and water in response to conceptualized stimuli which the animal had to derive from multidimensional stimulus conditions involving random combinations of colored lights.


1978 ◽  
Vol 156 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.M. Butter ◽  
C. Weinstein ◽  
D.B. Bender ◽  
C.G. Gross

1989 ◽  
Vol 61 (3) ◽  
pp. 669-678 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Miyashita ◽  
E. T. Rolls ◽  
P. M. Cahusac ◽  
H. Niki ◽  
J. D. Feigenbaum

To analyze neurophysiologically the functions of the primate hippocampus, the activity of 905 single hippocampal formation neurons was analyzed in two rhesus monkeys performing a conditional spatial response task known to be impaired in monkeys and in man by damage to the hippocampus or fornix. In the task, the monkey learned to make one spatial response, touching a screen three times when he saw one visual stimulus on the video monitor, and a different spatial response, of withdrawing his hand from the screen, when a different visual stimulus was shown. Fourteen percent of the neurons fired differentially to one or the other of the stimulus-spatial response associations. The mean latency of these differential responses was 154 +/- 44 (SD) ms. The firing of these neurons was shown to reflect a combination of the particular stimulus and the particular response associated by learning in the stimulus-response association task and could not be accounted for by the motor requirements of the task, nor wholly the stimulus aspects of the task, as demonstrated by testing their firing in related visual discrimination tasks. Responsive neurons were found throughout the hippocampal formation, but were particularly concentrated in the subicular complex and the CA3 subfield. These results show that single hippocampal neurons respond to combinations of the visual stimuli and the spatial responses with which they must become associated in conditional spatial response tasks and are consistent with the suggestion that part of the mechanism of this learning involves associations between visual stimuli and spatial responses learned by single hippocampal neurons.


1998 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 1107-1118 ◽  
Author(s):  
AUDIE G. LEVENTHAL ◽  
YONGCHANG WANG ◽  
MATTHEW T. SCHMOLESKY ◽  
YIFENG ZHOU

The responses of neurons in areas V1 (17) and V2 (18) of anesthetized and paralyzed rhesus monkeys and cats were recorded while presenting a set of computer-generated visual stimuli that varied in pattern, texture, luminance, and contrast. We find that a class of extrastriate cortical cells in cats and monkeys can signal the presence of boundaries regardless of the cue or cues that define the boundaries. These cue-invariant (CI) cells were rare in area V1 but easily found in V2. CI cortical cells responded more strongly to more salient boundaries regardless of the cue defining the boundaries. Many CI cortical cells responded to illusory contours and exhibited the same degree of orientation and direction selectivity when tested with boundaries defined by different cues. These cells have significant computational power inherent in their receptive fields since they were able to generalize across stimuli and integrate multiple cues simultaneously in order to signal boundaries. Cells in higher order cortical areas such as MT (Albright, 1992), MST (Geesaman & Anderson, 1996), and IT (Sary et al., 1993) have previously been reported to respond in a cue invariant fashion. The present results suggest that the ability to respond to boundaries in a cue-invariant manner originates at relatively early stages of cortical processing.


1978 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 467-475 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Elizabeth Kremer ◽  
Joseph S. Napierala ◽  
Richard H. Haude

Nine rhesus monkeys were tested in a visual observing situation to determine the influence of conditioned aversive visual stimulation. A set of meaningless visual stimuli was selected on the basis of cumulative frequency and cumulative duration of observing during a pretest phase of the experiment. Three subsets of stimuli (low, medium, high) were formed indicating level of observing during pretesting. A portion of the “medium” category of slides then served as conditioned stimuli in a classical conditioning procedure by being paired with electric shock. Following conditioning the entire set of stimuli was again presented in a visual observing situation. The results showed a significant decrease in both frequency and duration of observing of the slides with conditioned aversive qualities, relative to non-shock control slides. These findings support an aversion-produced suppression of observing relatively unconfounded by methodological, procedural, and other differences existing among previous reports on the role of fear or anxiety in this context.


Author(s):  
Glennelle Washington ◽  
Philip P. McGrath ◽  
Peter R. Graze ◽  
Ivor Royston

Herpes-like viruses were isolated from rhesus monkey peripheral blood leucocytes when co-cultivated with WI-38 cells. The virus was originally designated rhesus leucocyte-associated herpesvirus (LAHV) and subsequently called Herpesvirus mulatta (HVM). The original isolations were from juvenile rhesus monkeys shown to be free of antibody to rhesus cytomegalic virus. The virus could only be propagated in human or simian fibroblasts. Use of specific antisera developed from HVM showed no relationship between this virus and other herpesviruses. An electron microscopic study was undertaken to determine the morphology of Herpesvirus mulatta (HVM) in infected human fibroblasts.


Author(s):  
Julio H. Garcia ◽  
Janice P. Van Zandt

Repeated administration of methyl alcohol to Rhesus monkeys (Maccaca mulata) by intragastric tube resulted in ultrastructural abnormalities of hepatocytes, which persisted in one animal twelve weeks after discontinuation of the methyl alcohol regime. With dosages ranging between 3.0 to 6.0 gms. of methanol per kg. of body weight, the serum levels attained within a few hours averaged approximately 475 mg. per cent.


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