The role of visual experience in aligning sensory and motor maps in the optic tectum of the barn owl

1991 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sascha du Lac

Each optic tectum in Xenopus receives two visuotectal projections of the binocular portion of the visual world, one from each eye. These two visuotectal projections at each optic tectum are superimposed and in register, an arrangement made possible by the functional organization of a topographically ordered system of intertectal neuronal connections. Following surgical rotation of a larval eye in Xenopus a rearrangement of intertectal connections may take place during metamorphosis. The nature of the intertectal reorganization is such that the two visuotectal projections at each optic tectum remain in register. This synaptic reorganization requires visual experience. The capacity of the intertectal system to respond to such changes in interocular geometry reduces with age but even in adult life a residual plasticity of intertectal connections exists. In the adult animal an acute rotation of one eye by 90° evokes no reorganization of intertectal connections. An equivalent cumulative change in interocular relationship in adult life which is achieved very gradually rather than acutely can, however, lead to an appropriate reorganization of intertectal connections. It is suggested that the normal role of this residual intertectal plasticity is to compensate for the normal changes in interocular geometry that occur with growth in the post-metamorphic animal.


2010 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 888-902 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Tamietto ◽  
Franco Cauda ◽  
Luca Latini Corazzini ◽  
Silvia Savazzi ◽  
Carlo A. Marzi ◽  
...  

Following destruction or deafferentation of primary visual cortex (area V1, striate cortex), clinical blindness ensues, but residual visual functions may, nevertheless, persist without perceptual consciousness (a condition termed blindsight). The study of patients with such lesions thus offers a unique opportunity to investigate what visual capacities are mediated by the extrastriate pathways that bypass V1. Here we provide evidence for a crucial role of the collicular–extrastriate pathway in nonconscious visuomotor integration by showing that, in the absence of V1, the superior colliculus (SC) is essential to translate visual signals that cannot be consciously perceived into motor outputs. We found that a gray stimulus presented in the blind field of a patient with unilateral V1 loss, although not consciously seen, can influence his behavioral and pupillary responses to consciously perceived stimuli in the intact field (implicit bilateral summation). Notably, this effect was accompanied by selective activations in the SC and in occipito-temporal extrastriate areas. However, when instead of gray stimuli we presented purple stimuli, which predominantly draw on S-cones and are thus invisible to the SC, any evidence of implicit visuomotor integration disappeared and activations in the SC dropped significantly. The present findings show that the SC acts as an interface between sensory and motor processing in the human brain, thereby providing a contribution to visually guided behavior that may remain functionally and anatomically segregated from the geniculo-striate pathway and entirely outside conscious visual experience.


2012 ◽  
Vol 25 (0) ◽  
pp. 222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J. Proulx ◽  
Achille Pasqualotto ◽  
Shuichiro Taya

The topographic representation of space interacts with the mental representation of number. Evidence for such number–space relations have been reported in both synaesthetic and non-synaesthetic participants. Thus far most studies have only examined related effects in sighted participants. For example, the mental number line increases in magnitude from left to right in sighted individuals (Loetscher et al., 2008, Curr. Biol.). What is unclear is whether this association arises from innate mechanisms or requires visual experience early in life to develop in this way. Here we investigated the role of visual experience for the left to right spatial numerical association using a random number generation task in congenitally blind, late blind, and blindfolded sighted participants. Participants orally generated numbers randomly whilst turning their head to the left and right. Sighted participants generated smaller numbers when they turned their head to the left than to the right, consistent with past results. In contrast, congenitally blind participants generated smaller numbers when they turned their head to the right than to the left, exhibiting the opposite effect. The results of the late blind participants showed an intermediate profile between that of the sighted and congenitally blind participants. Visual experience early in life is therefore necessary for the development of the spatial numerical association of the mental number line.


2007 ◽  
Vol 27 (48) ◽  
pp. 13279-13291 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. E. Winkowski ◽  
E. I. Knudsen
Keyword(s):  
Barn Owl ◽  

Author(s):  
Ralph Schumacher

The aim of this paper is to defend a broad concept of visual perception, according to which it is a sufficient condition for visual perception that subjects receive visual information in a way which enables them to give reliably correct answers about the objects presented to them. According to this view, blindsight, non-epistemic seeing, and conscious visual experience count as proper types of visual perception. This leads to two consequences concerning the role of the phenomenal qualities of visual experiences. First, phenomenal qualities are not necessary in order to see something, because in the case of blindsight, subjects can see objects without experiences phenomenal qualities. Second, they cannot be intentional properties, since they are not essential properties of visual experiences, and because the content of visual experiences cannot be constituted by contingent properties.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Aggius-Vella ◽  
Claudio Campus ◽  
Andrew Joseph Kolarik ◽  
Monica Gori

2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (10) ◽  
pp. 1473-1482 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suddha Sourav ◽  
Ramesh Kekunnaya ◽  
Idris Shareef ◽  
Seema Banerjee ◽  
Davide Bottari ◽  
...  

Humans preferentially match arbitrary words containing higher- and lower-frequency phonemes to angular and smooth shapes, respectively. Here, we investigated the role of visual experience in the development of audiovisual and audiohaptic sound–shape associations (SSAs) using a unique set of five groups: individuals who had suffered a transient period of congenital blindness through congenital bilateral dense cataracts before undergoing cataract-reversal surgeries (CC group), individuals with a history of developmental cataracts (DC group), individuals with congenital permanent blindness (CB group), individuals with late permanent blindness (LB group), and controls with typical sight (TS group). Whereas the TS and LB groups showed highly robust SSAs, the CB, CC, and DC groups did not—in any of the modality combinations tested. These results provide evidence for a protracted sensitive period during which aberrant vision prevents SSA acquisition. Moreover, the finding of a systematic SSA in the LB group demonstrates that representations acquired during the sensitive period are resilient to loss despite dramatically changed experience.


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