“…Since rats readily survive extensive unilateral damage to the NC, it was decided to construct an experimental design that would utilize this capability. The design that was finally settled upon was based on the neuropsychological findings that bilaterally occipitalectomized rats , while being able to relearn a white-black (brightness) discrimination problem, cannot relearn a horizontal-vertical (pattern) discrimination problem (Horel, Bettinger, Royce, & Meyer, 1966;Lashley, 1950;Thompson, 1969) and upon the neuroanatomical findings that the occipitoreticular pathway described by Valverde is largely homolateral. If the occipitoreticular pathway is indeed critical for the performance of visual discrimination habits in the rat, then it would follow that rats trained on a brightness habit and a pattern habit with only the right occipital cortex intact would show considerable retardation in relearning the pattern habit after damage to the right NC, but would have little difficulty relearning the pattern habit after damage to the left NC.…”