Visual effects of damage to P ganglion cells in macaques
- 2 June 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Maximum Academic Press in Visual Neuroscience
- Vol. 8 (6) , 575-583
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0952523800005678
Abstract
Four indices of visual performance were measured in control macaques and in macaques that had been exposed to monomeric acrylamide, a neurotoxicant that preferentially damages P retinal ganglion cells. Morphological examination of the retina and visual pathways of these monkeys showed virtually complete loss of P ganglion cells over a region extending to at least 40 deg from the fovea, and relative sparing of M ganglion cells. The four tests examined visual functions for which the visual pathway from P ganglion cells might be of great importance: visual acuity, contrast discrimination, hyperacuity, and shape discrimination.In the acrylamide-dosed monkeys, visual acuity was reduced slightly more than fourfold, a somewhat larger reduction than that seen previously after ibotenic-acid lesions of the P pathway in the geniculate. The residual acuity was in good agreement with the Nyquist frequency calculated from the density of ON or OFF M ganglion cells. Contrast increment thresholds were elevated for the dosed monkeys only in one of the two conditions tested. The elevation was found only under those spatiotemporal conditions for which we have previously shown that contrast thresholds are increased by acrylamide exposure, and was most marked at low background contrasts. Vernier acuity was elevated in one dosed monkey, but not affected in a second monkey that also had severe loss of P ganglion cells. Finally, we found no effect of acrylamide exposure on the number of training trials required to learn simple or complex shape discriminations. These results support previous findings in showing that the P pathway mediates visual acuity, and they show that several other important aspects of visual perception are not exclusively dependent on the P pathway.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Macaque vision after magnocellular lateral geniculate lesionsVisual Neuroscience, 1990
- Functions of the colour-opponent and broad-band channels of the visual systemNature, 1990
- Cortical magnification factor and the ganglion cell density of the primate retinaNature, 1989
- Background light and the contrast gain of primate P and M retinal ganglion cells.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1988
- Concurrent processing streams in monkey visual cortexTrends in Neurosciences, 1988
- Contrast discrimination in peripheral visionJournal of the Optical Society of America A, 1987
- Visual Processing in Monkey Extrastriate CortexAnnual Review of Neuroscience, 1987
- Capabilities of monkey cortical cells in spatial-resolution tasksJournal of the Optical Society of America A, 1985
- Retinal Ganglion Cell Classes in the Old World Monkey: Morphology and Central ProjectionsScience, 1981
- Spatial summation and contrast sensitivity of X and Y cells in the lateral geniculate nucleus of the macaqueNature, 1981