3. The initial effects of monocular deprivation were graded in severity according to the age at which the deprivation was imposed, ranging from apparent blindness in animals deprived at 6 weeks of age to only a small loss of acuity in kittens deprived at 12 weeks of age.4. The effects of deprivation imposed from birth were particularly severe, leading to a temporary blindness. Nevertheless after a period of time that became progressively longer with increasing deprivation, all animals showed some recovery of pattern vision over the course of the next 2 or 3 months. The extent of this recovery became progressively less as the period of deprivation was prolonged. There was even some recovery of vision (an acuity of 2-5 cycles/deg) in animals that were deprived throughout the duration of the 'critical period' to 4 months of age.5. Direct comparison of the rate of behavioural recovery between animals that were reverse sutured with that of litter-mates that received binocular input after monocular occlusion to either 45 or 60 days of age proved to be remarkably similar, although the acuity that was eventually attained by the reverse sutured animals was always slightly higher.6. The recoveries observed after reverse suturing were reasonably well correlated with changes observed in the ocular dominance of visual cortical cells under similar circumstances. 7. Although the recovery in these animals can be accounted for by the simple notion of a competitive interaction between the two eyes, the recovery observed in animals that had both eyes open after the initial period of deprivation cannot be so readily explained. Evidently there must be an additional non-competitive mechanism of recovery.
The time course of development of visual acuity for square wave gratings was measured behaviourally in a number of cats that were reared in total darkness until they were either 4 (5 cats) or 6 (1 cat) months of age. Less extensive measurements were also made on animals reared in a similar manner until they were either 1 1/2 or 10 months old. Initially, all the animals appeared to be blind, but signs of vision became evident after periods of time in an illuminated environment that ranged from a few days, in the case of animals dark-reared for only 1 1/2 to 4 months, to 1 to 2 months for those animals that were deprived for 6 months or more. Thereafter, visual acuity as measured on a jumping stand progressively improved, reaching, in the case of animals deprived for 4 months, values that were comparable to those of normal animals (6.9 cycles/deg) after 4 months of exposure to light. The animal deprived for 6 months remained apparently blind for a month and eventually attained an acuity (5.7 cycles/deg) that was somewhat less than that of normal animals. The fact that such high acuities can be achieved after periods of binocular deprivation that extend throughout the classically defined "critical period" suggest that the effect of dark-rearing is somehow to impede the natural decline with age in the degree to which cortical neurones are susceptible to environmental modification.
A behavioural method is described for the measurement of various visual spatial acuities in kittens as young as thirty days of age. Expamples are given of applications of the technique to measurement of the visual acuity for gratings in normal kittens as well as to studies of the time course of behavioural recovery from the effects of early monocular visual deprivation.
SUMMARY: An ABA within-subject study design was used to assess the effect of dietary phenylalanine restriction on the visual attention span of three mentally retarded males (9, 15, and 21
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