“…The cat is one of the most studied models of infant-lesion–induced cerebral reorganization and sparing of function (Payne & Lomber, 2002; Spear, 1995; Villablanca, Schmanke, & Hovda, 1999) and has been used to demonstrate that lesions of primary visual cortex at postnatal day 1 (P1) produces rewiring of visual circuits (Kalil, Tong, & Spear, 1991; Lomber, MacNeil, & Payne, 1995; Lomber, Payne, Cornwell, & Pearson, 1993; Payne & Lomber, 1998) and alterations in their metabolic capacities and physiological properties (Desautels & Casanova, 2001; Guido, Spear, & Tong, 1992; Ouellette, Minville, Boire, Ptito, & Casanova, 2007; Spear, Tong, & McCall, 1988); overall, this reorganization serves to produce a blurring of the ordinarily sharp cerebral localization of function (Lomber & Payne, 2001) and correlates with a higher degree of functional recovery in P1-lesioned animals than in adults with equivalent brain damage (Hovda & Villablanca, 1990; Payne, 2003; Payne & Cornwell, 1994).…”