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J Neurophysiol (July 23, 2008). doi:10.1152/jn.90411.2008 Free Article
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Submitted on March 27, 2008
Revised on July 15, 2008
Accepted on July 17, 2008

Recovery from monocular deprivation using binocular deprivation: Experimental observations and theoretical analysis

Brian Blais1, Mikhail Frenkel2, Scott Kuindersma, Rahmat Muhammad3, Harel Z Shouval4, Leon N Cooper5, and Mark F. Bear3*

1 Bryant University
2 HHMI/MIT
3 MIT
4 University of Texas medical school at Houston
5 Brown University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mbear{at}mit.edu.

Ocular dominance (OD) plasticity is a robust paradigm for examining the functional consequences of synaptic plasticity. Previous experimental and theoretical results have shown that OD plasticity can be accounted for by known synaptic plasticity mechanisms, using the assumption that deprivation by lid suture eliminates spatial structure in the deprived channel. Here we show that in the mouse, recovery from monocular lid suture can be obtained by subsequent binocular lid suture but not by dark rearing. This poses a significant challenge to previous theoretical results. We therefore performed simulations with a natural input environment appropriate for mouse visual cortex. In contrast to previous work we assume that lid suture causes degradation but not elimination of spatial structure, whereas dark rearing produces elimination of spatial structure. We present experimental evidence that supports this assumption, measuring responses through sutured lids in the mouse. The change in assumptions about the input environment is sufficient to account for new experimental observations, while still accounting for previous experimental results.




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Phil Trans R Soc BHome page
G. B Smith, A. J Heynen, and M. F Bear
Bidirectional synaptic mechanisms of ocular dominance plasticity in visual cortex
Phil Trans R Soc B, February 12, 2009; 364(1515): 357 - 367.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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