Cortical binocularity in infants
- 1 November 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 288 (5789) , 363-365
- https://doi.org/10.1038/288363a0
Abstract
The primate visual cortex, including that of man, receives separate input from each eye and these interact in binocular cortical neurones. This organization is known to be vulnerable to disruption in early life1. To understand the development of human visual cortex, and to detect and assess disorders of binocular function at the earliest possible age, a robust method is needed for detecting binocular interactions in the infant's visual system. We have done this by recording cortical visual evoked responses (VERs) to the onset and offset of binocular correlation in a large-screen dynamic random dot display. We report here that, in general, the human infant has a functional binocular visual cortex by 3 months of age, with some individuals showing cortical binocularity at an earlier age.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stereopsis in Human InfantsScience, 1980
- CONTRAST SENSITIVITY OF THE HUMAN NEONATE MEASURED BY THE VISUAL EVOKED-POTENTIAL1979
- Sustained cortical potentials evoked in humans by binocularly correlated, uncorrelated and disparate dynamic random-dot stimuliNeuroscience Letters, 1978
- Visual texture discrimination using random-dot patterns: CommentJournal of the Optical Society of America, 1978
- Development of binocular fixation in human infantsJournal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1977
- Stereoscopic Discrimination in InfantsPerception, 1976
- Sensitive Period for the Development of Human Binocular VisionScience, 1975
- The effect of visual experience on the development of stimulus specificity by kitten cortical neuronesThe Journal of Physiology, 1974
- BINOCULAR INTERACTION IN STRIATE CORTEX OF KITTENS REARED WITH ARTIFICIAL SQUINTJournal of Neurophysiology, 1965