Sengpiel F, Blakemore C, Kind P C, Harrad R
University Laboratory of Physiology, University of Oxford, United Kingdom.
J Neurosci. 1994 Nov;14(11 Pt 2):6855-71. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.14-11-06855.1994.
Strabismic humans usually experience powerful suppression of vision in the nonfixating eye. In an attempt to demonstrate physiological correlates of such suppression, we recorded from the primary visual cortex of cats with surgically induced squint and studied the responses of neurons to drifting gratings of different orientation, spatial frequency, and contrast in the two eyes. Only 1 of 50 apparently monocular cells showed any evidence of remaining, subliminal excitatory input from the "silent" eye when the two eyes were stimulated with gratings of similar orientation, and even among the small proportion of cells that remained binocularly driven, very few exhibited facilitation when stimulated binocularly. The majority of cells from both exotropes and esotropes, even those that could be independently driven through either eye, displayed nonspecific interocular suppression: stimulation of the nondominant eye with a drifting grating of any orientation depressed the response to an optimal grating being presented to the dominant eye. This phenomenon exhibited a gross nonlinearity in that it was dependent on the temporal sequence of stimulus presentation: stimulation of the nondominant eye caused significant suppression only if the neuron was already responding to an appropriate stimulus in the dominant eye, but not when onset of stimulation in the two eyes was simultaneous. Interocular suppression was always independent of the relative spatial phase of the two grating stimuli, and usually broadly tuned for the spatial frequency of the suppressive stimulus. Suppression may depend on inhibitory interaction between neighboring ocular dominance columns, combined with the loss of conventional disparity-selective binocular interactions for matched stimuli in the two eyes. The similarity of interocular suppression in strabismic cats and that caused by orthogonal gratings in the two eyes in normal cats (Sengpiel and Blakemore, 1994; Sengpiel et al., 1994) suggests that strabismic suppression and binocular rivalry depend on similar neural mechanisms.
患有斜视的人通常会经历非注视眼视力的强烈抑制。为了证明这种抑制的生理相关性,我们记录了手术诱发斜视的猫的初级视觉皮层,并研究了神经元对两眼不同方向、空间频率和对比度的漂移光栅的反应。当用相似方向的光栅刺激两眼时,50个明显单眼的细胞中只有1个显示出任何来自“沉默”眼的残留阈下兴奋性输入的证据,即使在仍由双眼驱动的一小部分细胞中,双眼刺激时很少有细胞表现出易化作用。外斜视和内斜视猫的大多数细胞,即使是那些可以通过任何一只眼睛独立驱动的细胞,都表现出非特异性的眼间抑制:用任何方向的漂移光栅刺激非优势眼会抑制对呈现给优势眼的最佳光栅的反应。这种现象表现出明显的非线性,因为它取决于刺激呈现的时间顺序:只有当神经元已经对优势眼中的适当刺激做出反应时,刺激非优势眼才会引起明显的抑制,而当两眼刺激同时开始时则不会。眼间抑制总是与两个光栅刺激的相对空间相位无关,并且通常对抑制性刺激的空间频率有广泛的调谐。抑制可能取决于相邻眼优势柱之间的抑制性相互作用,以及两眼匹配刺激时传统视差选择性双眼相互作用的丧失。斜视猫的眼间抑制与正常猫两眼正交光栅引起的眼间抑制的相似性(Sengpiel和Blakemore,1994年;Sengpiel等人,1994年)表明,斜视抑制和双眼竞争依赖于相似的神经机制。