Department of Psychology & Neuroscience, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada B3H 4R2.
Neural Plast. 2019 Apr 24;2019:7624837. doi: 10.1155/2019/7624837. eCollection 2019.
Recent studies conducted on kittens have revealed that the reduced visual acuity of the deprived eye following a short period of monocular deprivation imposed in early life is reversed quickly following a 10-day period spent in total darkness. This study explored the contribution of the fellow eye to the darkness-induced recovery of the acuity of the deprived eye. Upon emergence of kittens from darkness, the fellow eye was occluded for different lengths of time in order to investigate its effects on either the speed or the extent of the recovery of acuity of the deprived eye. Occlusion of the fellow eye for even a day immediately following the period spent in darkness blocked any recovery of the acuity of the deprived eye. Moreover, occlusion of the fellow eye two days after the period of darkness blocked any further visual recovery beyond that achieved in the short period when both eyes were open. The results imply that the darkness-induced recovery of the acuity of the deprived eye depends upon, and is guided by, neural activity in the mature neural connections previously established by the fellow eye.
最近对小猫进行的研究表明,在早期单眼剥夺期间短暂剥夺一只眼的视力后,在完全黑暗中度过 10 天后,被剥夺的眼睛的视力会迅速恢复。本研究探讨了同眼对视神经剥夺后视力恢复的贡献。当小猫从黑暗中出来时,同眼被遮挡不同的时间长度,以研究其对视神经剥夺后视力恢复速度或程度的影响。即使在黑暗期结束后立即将同眼遮挡一天,也会阻止被剥夺的眼睛的视力恢复。此外,在黑暗期结束两天后遮挡同眼,会阻止除双眼开放的短时间内已经实现的视觉恢复以外的任何进一步的视觉恢复。结果表明,视神经剥夺后视力的恢复取决于并受到同眼以前建立的成熟神经连接中的神经活动的指导。