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Title

Differential retinal origins of separate anatomical channels for pattern and motion vision in rabbit.

Authors

Steele-Russell, I.; Russell, M.; Castiglioni, J.; Graham, J.

Abstract

The most conspicuous feature of the rabbit retina is the visual streak that extends along the horizontal azimuth from the nasal margin to the temporal limit of the retina. We believe the streak processes movement vision and that the temporal region (area centralis) is responsible for pattern perception. Both anatomical and behavioural experiments were used to test this hypothesis. Behavioural measures of pattern vision in normal and chiasma-sectioned rabbits revealed both to have the same visual acuity. Using OKN as a measure of movement vision, normal rabbits showed both a directional and velocity-tuned response. The chiasma-sectioned rabbits, with only uncrossed fibre projections remaining, showed a total loss of movement detection. The injection of HRP into the vitreal chamber of one eye in normal rabbits revealed extensive uptake throughout the contralateral thalamus. In the ipsilateral thalamus, there was uptake solely from the ipsilateral retinal projection to a restricted wafer of the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN). The chiasma cut rabbits showed a very different distribution of HRP in the thalamus. The uptake was restricted to a thin wafer of the LGN, with no contralateral uptake. Thus, the thalamic projections from the retinal area centralis were strictly segregated from the thalamic target areas for the visual streak without any overlap. These findings provide strong evidence for separate retinal origins with anatomically separate pathways for pattern and movement vision in the rabbit.

Subjects

RETINAL anatomy; PSYCHOLOGY of movement; AZIMUTH; GENICULATE bodies; VISUAL acuity; VISUAL perception; LABORATORY rabbits

Publication

Experimental Brain Research, 2012, Vol 222, Issue 1/2, p99

ISSN

0014-4819

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1007/s00221-012-3198-1

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