Quantitative studies of single-cell properties in monkey striate cortex. II. Orientation specificity and ocular dominance
- 1 November 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 39 (6) , 1320-1333
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.1976.39.6.1320
Abstract
1. Quantitative analyses of orientation specificity and ocular dominance were carried out in striate cortex of the rhesus monkey. 2. Sharpness of orientation selectivity was greater for simple (S type) than for complex (CX type) cells. CX-type cells became more broadly tuned in the deeper cortical layers: S-type cells were equally well tuned throughout the cortex. 3. Sharpness of orientation selectivity for S-type cells was similar at all retinal eccentricities studied (0 degrees - 20 degrees from the fovea):in CX-type cells orientation selectivity decreased slightly with increasing eccentricity. 4. The orientation tuning of binocular cells was similar when mapped separately through each eye. 5. Orientation selectivity and direction selectivity are independent of each other, suggesting that separate neural mechanisms give rise to them. 6. More CX-type cells can be binocularly activated than S-type cells (88% versus 49%). The ocular dominance of S-type cells is similar in all cortical layers: for CX-type cells there is an increase in the number of cells in ocular-dominance category 4 in layers 5 and 6.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Quantitative studies of single-cell properties in monkey striate cortex. I. Spatiotemporal organization of receptive fieldsJournal of Neurophysiology, 1976
- Receptive fields and functional architecture of monkey striate cortexThe Journal of Physiology, 1968