Mlinar E J, Goodale M A
Exp Brain Res. 1984;55(1):33-48. doi: 10.1007/BF00240496.
Two experiments were carried out with Mongolian gerbils to determine the roles of optic tectum and visual cortex in the mediation of visually guided head turns and locomotion elicited and controlled by discrete visual targets. In Experiment 1, the behavior of animals with either a sham operation, a bilateral lesion of optic tectum, or a bilateral ablation of areas 17, 18a, and 18b was recorded on videotape as they ran from the center of a circular arena toward a small visual target projected in different locations around the perimeter of the arena. The amplitude and direction of the head turns and the accuracy of their locomotor responses were reconstructed from a frame by frame analysis of the videotapes. Sham-operate gerbils made a series of head turns before running accurately and efficiently toward the target. The gerbils with lesions of areas 17, 18a, and 18b rarely made more than one head turn before running toward the perimeter of the arena. Although the single head turn they did make was often well-correlated with the position of the target in their visual field, the direction of their locomotor response was largely determined by the direction and amplitude of that head turn. As a consequence, these animals undershot the target more often than did the sham-operate animals, and even ran into the visual half field opposite the target if their head turn had also been made into that half field. Unlike the sham operates, these animals were unable to make further adjustments in their orientation toward the stimulus after their initial head turn. The head turns and locomotor behavior of the gerbils with lesions of optic tectum were even more disorganized and inaccurate than those of the posterior decorticates. Nevertheless, when the target was presented within 45 degrees from their visual midline, their head turns and locomotor responses showed a systematic relationship with the eccentricity of the target. Their behavior to stimuli outside this central wedge of their visual field was completely disorganized and showed no relationship to the location of the target. In Experiment 2, unilateral lesions of area 17 were performed in the gerbils that had already received bilateral tectal lesions to determine whether such lesions would affect the "residual" ability of these animals to orient toward stimuli located within the central portion of their visual field. During retesting, these animals were able to respond to targets only if they were located in the central portion of the field ipsilateral to the cortical lesion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
进行了两项以蒙古沙鼠为对象的实验,以确定视顶盖和视皮层在介导由离散视觉目标引发和控制的视觉引导头部转动及运动中的作用。在实验1中,当动物从圆形场地中心跑向投射在场地周边不同位置的小视觉目标时,对接受假手术、双侧视顶盖损伤或双侧17区、18a区和18b区切除的动物的行为进行录像记录。通过对录像带逐帧分析来重建头部转动的幅度和方向以及它们运动反应的准确性。接受假手术的沙鼠在准确高效地跑向目标之前会进行一系列头部转动。17区、18a区和18b区损伤的沙鼠在跑向场地周边之前很少进行超过一次的头部转动。尽管它们仅有的那一次头部转动通常与目标在其视野中的位置有很好的相关性,但它们运动反应的方向很大程度上由那次头部转动的方向和幅度决定。结果,这些动物比接受假手术的动物更经常未到达目标,而且如果它们的头部转动也转向了目标对面的视野半场,甚至会跑进该半场。与接受假手术的动物不同,这些动物在最初的头部转动之后无法对刺激的方向做出进一步调整。视顶盖损伤的沙鼠的头部转动和运动行为比后皮质切除的沙鼠更加紊乱和不准确。然而,当目标出现在距它们视觉中线45度范围内时,它们的头部转动和运动反应与目标的离心率呈现出系统的关系。它们对视野中这个中央楔形区域之外的刺激的行为完全紊乱,与目标位置没有关系。在实验2中,对已经接受双侧顶盖损伤的沙鼠进行17区单侧损伤,以确定这种损伤是否会影响这些动物朝向位于其视野中央部分的刺激定向的“残余”能力。在重新测试期间,这些动物只有在目标位于与皮质损伤同侧的视野中央部分时才能对目标做出反应。(摘要截取自400字)