“…Histological staining has revealed a laminar structure, with the superficial layers involved in the processing of spatial information on the basis of visual signals, whereas the deeper layers receive signals from vision, audition, and tactile sensations, allowing multisensory representations of space (May, 2005;Wallace, Wilkinson, & Stein, 1996). Ablation studies in cats (Burnett, Stein, Chaponis, & Wallace, 2004;Lomber, Payne, & Cornwell, 2001), rats (Overton & Dean, 1988), and hamsters (Thinusblanc, Scardigli, & Buhot, 1991) have demonstrated a causal link between activity in the SC and the production of orienting behaviors and responses to novelty. For example, Lomber et al (2001) unilaterally deactivated the superficial layer of the SC in cats and found profound orienting deficits for both moving and stationary visual stimuli presented in the contralateral hemispace.…”