“…More restricted damage to the parietal area, particularly in Krieg's areas 7 and the more lateral area 39 (Krieg, 1946), does not produce major visual discrimination impairments but does produce a variety of spatial deficits, for example, on spatial alternation and in spatial mazes (Boyd & Thomas, 1977;Kolb, Sutherland, & Whishaw, 1983;McDaniel, Davall, & Walker, 1989), in navigation toward a hidden platform in a swimming pool task (DiMattia & Kesner, 1988;Kolb & Walkey, 1987), and on the radial arm maze (Kolb et al, 1983). Thus, impairments in locomotor guidance and spatial function seen in earlier studies after very extensive bilateral posterior cortical lesions (e.g., Goodale et al, 1978) might have been due not to striate removal but to rostral encroachment on the parietal area (see McDaniel & Wall, 1988). One component of such deficits might therefore be a rodent equivalent of the visuospatial deficit seen in man and monkey after parietal damage.…”