How did they find out that baby’s vision isn’t developed?
Through usign visual evoked potentails and using gratings and analysing results to reconstruct image.
What leads to ocular dominance shift?
monoocular deprivation
Why babies can’t see?
Not bcse optics.
While rod-dominated peripheral retina of the new-
born appears normal, the all-cone fovea contains
widely spaced and poorly developed cones.
* Visual cortex is not fully developed.
what are the underpinning hebian mechanisms resulting in ocular dominace shift?
LTP: open eye input. LTD:closed eye input and Inhibitory synapses
may become stronger
and/or alter network
properties to enable
LTD
what happens when you suture both eyes?
Few binocualr cells develop. Although receptive fields are not imapcted.
why are there uniform distribution in first 2 weeks?
LGN afferents terminating in layer IV of
striate cortex have markedly
overlapping arbors
process of marking ocular dominance coloumns?
you inject the radioactive amino acid that gets taken
up by the retinal ganglion cells take it up to
the the LGN nucleus.
It goes across the synapse, get taken up by the
postsynaptic cells and the postsynaptic cells.
Then take it right up to the primary visual cortex.
When are ocular domiance columns visible?
Distinct ocular dominance patterns are
evident within about 6 weeks in layer IV
(cat and monkey
how do Geniculocortical axon arbors in layer IV in normal cats
and after monocular deprivation present?
In young: terminal wide, expand over a large region.
In mature: condensed compact
open monoocualr deprivation: terminals broader
closed: thinly sparse.
ocular dominance shift: how and why
ocular domiance shift: when does it occur?
During critical period of close to 1 week in first few weeks of life.
can you reverse ocular dominance shift during critical period?
yes. even for 14 days reversal.
why critical periods don’t last?
Theories about termination of Critical Period:
1. When axonal growth stops… when they lose their
ability to change terminal length.
2. When synaptic transmission has fully matured…from
changes in post-synaptic receptors (glutamate,
NMDA, GABAergic inhibition, etc.)
3. When activity of neuromodulators (norepinephrine,
acetylcholine, etc.) in certain cortical areas decline.
critical periods across vision?
Bionocular vision has varying critical periods across species. In humans 3-4 years. Different visual
functions have
different critical
periods
Is critical period restricted to vision?
CLASSICAL FRAMEWORK OF CRITICAL PERIODS
For sensory systems to develop fully, normal visual
experience is necessary.
* There is a ‘critical period’ (CP) during early life, when
developing visual system is susceptible for environmental
influences.
* Changes specific to CP involve axonal and dendritic
sprouting, experience-dependent competition, pruning of
axons, neuromodulators, etc.
* After the critical period, it is not possible to induce
changes in early sensory areas.
Classical framework
beyond critical period, plasticity after adulthood
Not much is goin gto change.
1. Nerve cells in the adult do not divide
2. There is no significant growth of nerve fibres.
Consequence: Only changes in synaptic strength (i.e., Hebb synapse)
can mediate plasticity….. for learning and memory, recovery
after injury, etc.
Can plasticity be restored and how?
Neural stem cells have been shown to divide, differentiate and
even find the right targets and behave within normal
physiological ranges!
* Axons and dendrites can sprout!
Plasticity beyond critical period
what is activated during reading?
Visual word form area.
what else can activate the wisual word form area?
Braille reading in the blind also activates the same ‘Visual
Word Form area (VWFA) as in the normally sighted.
How is cross modality shown in the blind?
How can plasticity be restored after critical period?
Administration of
antidepressant, fluoxetine
(selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitor) to adult
rats enables induction of
ocular dominance shift by
monocular deprivation.
Amblyopic rats
chronically treated with
fluoxetine showed recovery
in both visual acuity
(above left) and in the C/I
VEP ratio (below left).
Restoring plasticity beyond critical period
(Lamberto Maffei & colleagues in Pisa)
What are the pharmacological mechanisms of adult platicity?
Reduction in
inhibition +
persistent changes
at excitatory
synapses +
modulation by
acetylcholine via
astrocytes
What is the evidence of exercise in restoring plasticity?
Mice, growing with enriched environment (with access to
running wheels), show life-long ocular dominance
plasticity. as well as ones experiencing stroke.