We have developed a simple computer-based discrimination task that enables the quick determination of visual acuities in rodents. A grating is displayed randomly on one of two monitors at the wide end of a trapezoidal-shaped tank containing shallow water. Animals are trained to swim toward the screens, and at a fixed distance, choose the screen displaying the grating and escape to a submerged platform hidden below it. Both mice and rats learn the task quickly. Performance falls below 70% when the spatial frequency is increased beyond 0.5 cycles in most C57BU6 mice, and around 1.0 cycles per degree (cpd) in Long-Evans rats.
Rats have become a popular model for investigating the mechanisms underlying ocular dominance plasticity; however, no quantitative assessment of the effects of visual deprivation on behavioural acuity has been reported in this species. We measured the spatial acuity of monocularly and binocularly deprived rats with a visual discrimination task. The average spatial acuity of normal rats and rats deprived of vision after postnatal day 40 was approximately 1 cycle/degree. Monocular deprivation up to postnatal day 40 resulted in a 30% decrease in acuity and there was no recovery after 8 months. Identical binocular deprivation produced a comparable but significantly smaller reduction in acuity. The deleterious effects of monocular and binocular deprivation on visual acuity indicate that the development of cortical receptive field properties related to spatial tuning are affected by both monocular and binocular deprivation. The similarities in the effects of visual deprivation on visual acuity between rats and other mammals confirm that rats are a good model system for studying the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying experience-dependent visual plasticity.
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