Adult plasticity of spatiotemporal receptive fields of multisensory superior colliculus neurons following early visual deprivation
- PMID: 20404413
- PMCID: PMC3652394
- DOI: 10.3233/RNN-2010-0488
Adult plasticity of spatiotemporal receptive fields of multisensory superior colliculus neurons following early visual deprivation
Abstract
Purpose: Previous work has established that the integrative capacity of multisensory neurons in the superior colliculus (SC) matures over a protracted period of postnatal life (Wallace and Stein, 1997), and that the development of normal patterns of multisensory integration depends critically on early sensory experience (Wallace et al., 2004). Although these studies demonstrated the importance of early sensory experience in the creation of mature multisensory circuits, it remains unknown whether the reestablishment of sensory experience in adulthood can reverse these effects and restore integrative capacity.
Methods: The current study tested this hypothesis in cats that were reared in absolute darkness until adulthood and then returned to a normal housing environment for an equivalent period of time. Single unit extracellular recordings targeted multisensory neurons in the deep layers of the SC, and analyses were focused on both conventional measures of multisensory integration and on more recently developed methods designed to characterize spatiotemporal receptive fields (STRF).
Results: Analysis of the STRF structure and integrative capacity of multisensory SC neurons revealed significant modifications in the temporal response dynamics of multisensory responses (e.g., discharge durations, peak firing rates, and mean firing rates), as well as significant changes in rates of spontaneous activation and degrees of multisensory integration.
Conclusions: These results emphasize the importance of early sensory experience in the establishment of normal multisensory processing architecture and highlight the limited plastic potential of adult multisensory circuits.
Figures





References
-
- Avillac M, Deneve S, Olivier E, Pouget A, Duhamel JR. Reference frames for representing visual and tactile locations in parietal cortex. Nat Neurosci. 2005;8(7):941–949. - PubMed
-
- Calvert GA, Spence C, Stein BE. The Handbook of Multisensory Processes. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press; 2004.
-
- Carriere BN, Royal DW, Perrault TJ, Morrison SP, Vaughan JW, Stein BE, et al. Visual deprivation alters the development of cortical multisensory integration. J Neurophysiol. 2007;98(5):2858–2867. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources