Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 8, 2713-2728, Copyright © 1988 by Society for Neuroscience
Development of spatial and temporal selectivity in the suprasylvian visual cortex of the cat
T Zumbroich, DJ Price and C Blakemore
University Laboratory of Physiology, Oxford, England.
We have studied the development of the spatial and temporal properties of
neurons in the medial bank of the suprasylvian visual cortex (PMLS) in
kittens aged between 9 d and 8 weeks. Quantitative measurements were made
of the responses to drifting high-contrast gratings of optimum orientation
and direction of motion, but varying in spatial and temporal frequency. The
spatial resolution ("acuity") of cells increased rapidly and was fully
mature (over 2 cycles/deg for the best cells) at 3 weeks of age. The
optimum spatial frequency also tended to improve and reached adult values
(around 0.5 cycles/deg for the best cells) at about the end of the third
week. In younger kittens, the spatial resolution of neurons was not
obviously correlated with the eccentricity of their receptive fields, but
in older animals acuity was clearly elevated for receptive fields in the
central visual field. The proportion of "low-pass" cells (showing no
obvious attenuation of response for gratings of low spatial frequency)
decreased with age and simultaneously there was a slight increase in the
mean spatial bandwidth of "bandpass" cells. Responses to drifting
sinusoidal gratings were generally dominated by an unmodulated elevation of
discharge at all ages. In tests with stationary, contrast-modulated
gratings presented at different spatial positions, cells in the youngest
kittens behaved nonlinearly and showed mainly an unmodulated increase in
discharge, whereas in older kittens, as in adult cats, most neurons
responded to contrast-modulated gratings with a small, phase- dependent
response at the temporal frequency of modulation and a larger component at
twice the fundamental frequency. None of the cells recorded at any age had
a true "null position." As in adult PMLS, the widths of receptive fields in
kittens were, on average, about twice the size of the preferred spatial
period (4 times the preferred bar width). At all ages, therefore, neurons
in PMLS resembled striate complex cells with respect to the nonlinearity of
their responses and the spatial structure of their receptive fields. The
preferred temporal frequency and high-temporal-frequency cutoff also
improved, on average, during the first 3 weeks of life, and the range of
temporal frequencies over which cells responded continued to increase until
at least 8 weeks. Although the low-spatial-frequency inhibition that
creates spatial bandpass characteristics probably depends on cortical
mechanisms, the postnatal development of both temporal and spatial
resolution might well be limited by maturation at the level of the retina.