In our previous study of the cytoarchitectonic field 7 of cat cortex we had described neurons with extremely elongated receptive fields (RFs). The long axes of these RFs were oriented radially, towards the centre of the retina. These neurons represented only the lower contralateral part of visual field. They were surrounded from all sides by neurons with clearly different RF properties. We proposed that neurons with a similar radial organization and with RFs in the upper visual field also exist in the cortex but are localized in the area that was distant from the representation of the corresponding lower visual field. We expected to find these neurons in front of the representation of the upper visual field in areas V1, V2 and V3 (fields 17, 18 and 19), behind the central representation in area 21a. This cortical region was studied in five behaving cats. In all animals, neurons with radial RFs in the upper visual field were found in the expected location. As in the lower visual field, their RFs always spared the central visual field. Other RF properties of these neurons were also very similar to those found previously in the lower visual field. It became obvious that neurons with radial RFs are included into the fourth extrastriate crescent with complete contralateral representation. However, in the fourth crescent, RF properties in the central visual field differed significantly from those on the periphery. As a result, neurons with similar radial RFs in the upper and lower visual fields were located in the distant cortical regions, and were separated by the representation of the central visual field presented by the non-radial neurons of the cytoarchitectonic area 21a.
A scent lineup is generally a procedure whereby a dog's alerting behavior is used to establish that the dog detects two scents, one from a crime scene and one from a suspect, as being identical. The aim of this article is to compare methodologies of using dogs in scent lineups as a means of identifying perpetrators of crimes. It is hoped that this comparative approach, looking at countries where the method is currently or has in the past been used, will help determine what issues should be addressed in order to assure that the scent lineup will have a future as a forensic technique. Participants from eleven countries-Belgium,
Recently, elongated comet-shaped receptive fields were discovered in the fourth extrastriate crescent (area V4A) of cats and monkeys. It was shown that the long axes of these receptive fields were oriented radially toward the centre of the retina. Such unusual "radial" organization of this extrastriate area led to the assumption that these neurons may contribute to the analysis of optic flow. To investigate this assumption we recorded activity of neurons in the V4A of cats during real motion in depth toward or away from a stationary visual scene. Responses of neurons in area V4A were compared with activity of neurons in area V2 under similar conditions of stimulation. Area V2 is known to be sensitive to motion but does not have radial organization. It was found that a substantial number of visual neurons in both areas did not fire at all when cats were exposed to motion in depth. Nevertheless, neurons with selective activation to direction of motion in depth were identified, but comparable numbers were found in both areas studied. We conclude that radial organization of the fourth extrastriate crescent does not provide any special advantage for the analysis of optic flow information.
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