The role of the corpus callosum and some subcortical commissures in interocular transfer in the hooded rat
- 1 May 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Experimental Brain Research
- Vol. 42-42 (3-4) , 467-474
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00237511
Abstract
The effect of sectioning the corpus callosum on interocular transfer of a brightness and a horizontal/vertical discrimination was examined in hooded rats. Lesions of the posterior portion of the callosum usually led to moderate transfer deficits, but considerable individual variation was found. Lesions involving only the anterior part of the callosum had little effect on transfer. This suggests a functional localisation in the corpus callosum of the rat similar to that seen in higher mammals. Section of the posterior and tectal commissures and the thalamic massa intermedia in addition to the callosum had no greater effect on transfer than callosal section alone. It is therefore unlikely that these structures play a crucial role in interocular transfer in the rat.This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- ROLE OF INTERPROBLEM LEARNING IN INTEROCULAR TRANSFERPerceptual and Motor Skills, 1980
- The retinal origin of uncrossed optic nerve fibres in rats and their role in visual discriminationExperimental Brain Research, 1979
- Successful interocular transfer of visual pattern discriminations in split-chiasm cats with section of the intertectal and posterior commissuresPhysiology & Behavior, 1978
- Inheritance and variability of the organization of the retinogeniculate projections in pigmented and albino ratsBrain Research, 1974
- Split brain rat: A new surgical approachPhysiology & Behavior, 1974
- Effects of sectioning the corpus callosum on interocular transfer in hooded ratsExperimental Brain Research, 1973
- Visual processing in the split-brain cat: One versus two hemispheresExperimental Neurology, 1971
- Uncrossed Visual Pathways of Hooded and Albino RatsScience, 1965
- Interocular transfer of brightness and pattern discriminations in normal and corpus callosum-sectioned rats.Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 1965
- Optokinetic Nystagmus: An unlearned Response Altered by Section of Chiasma and Corpus Callosum in MonkeysNature, 1964