(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2000;41:4022-4031.)
© 2000
by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
Binocular Cross-Orientation Suppression in the Primary Visual Cortex (V1) of Infant Rhesus Monkeys
Minoru Endo1,2,
Jon H. Kaas3,
Neeragi Jain3,
Earl L. Smith, III1 and
Yuzo Chino1
1 From the College of Optometry, University of Houston, Houston, Texas; and
2 Department of Psychology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee.
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Abstract
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PURPOSE. To better understand the course of cortical maturation during early
development, the phenomenon of binocular cross-orientation suppression
in neurons of the primary visual cortex (V1) in young infant monkeys
was investigated.
METHODS. Extracellular single-unit recordings were made in anesthetized and
paralyzed monkeys ranging in age between 6 days and 8 weeks.
Orthogonally oriented, dichoptic sine-wave gratings were used as visual
stimuli.
RESULTS. V1 neurons in young infant monkeys showed a higher prevalence and
greater magnitude of binocular cross-orientation suppression than in
adult monkeys. Binocular suppression decreased and reached an adult
level between 4 and 8 weeks of age, the presumed onset-age for
stereopsis in monkeys.
CONCLUSIONS. During the first 4 weeks of life, the functional connections that are
necessary for initiating binocular cross-orientation suppression exist
in the monkey primary visual cortex. This finding is consistent with
the view that before the abrupt onset of stereopsis, human infants may
detect the differences between interocularly iso-oriented gratings and
orthogonal gratings.
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Introduction
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The binocular visual capacities of primates are severely limited
near birth.1
2
3
Stereopsis, a highly sensitive indicator
of the functional status of binocular vision, is absent in subhuman
primates at birth but suddenly emerges around 4 to 6 weeks of
age.4
Similarly stereopsis emerges at about 4 to 6 months
of age in humans.5
6
Many of the neural connections in V1
that are required for binocular functions in primates are present at
birth7
and functionally emerge without extensive visual
experience.8
However, before 8 weeks of age, the monocular
receptive-field properties of V1 units are immature, and their overall
responsiveness is lower than in adult monkeys.8
9
The
immature monocular responses of V1 neurons are likely to limit the
processing of disparity information and delay the onset of
stereopsis.8
However, because the presence of disparity
sensitive binocular units in the extrastriate areas may be necessary
for stereopsis,10
the functional connections in the
extrastriate visual areas may be poorly developed during the first
several weeks of life, which may also constrain the emergence of
stereoscopic vision.
A recent VEP study using dichoptic masking methods in human infants
revealed another immaturity in how binocular signals are combined in
the visual cortex.11
Specifically, these investigators
found that although qualitatively adultlike, binocular VEP responses
were present in infants ranging in age between 5 and 15 months (roughly
equivalent to 515 weeks in monkeys), interocular cross-orientation
suppression was weaker in these infants than in adults.11
To gain insight into the origins of this reduced interocular
cross-orientation inhibition in the visual brain of infants, we
determined whether individual V1 neurons in infant monkeys exhibit
adultlike binocular inhibitory interactions in response to orthogonally
oriented, dichoptic sine-wave gratings.
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Methods
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All experimental procedures conformed to the National Institute of
Health guidelines for use of animals in research and the ARVO Statement
for the Use of Animals in Ophthalmic and Vision Research.
Subjects and Surgical Preparation
The preparation and recording methods have been described in
detail elsewhere.8
12
The ages of the infant monkeys
(Macaca mulatta) at the time of recording experiments were 1
(n = 3), 2 (n = 2), 4
(n = 2), or 8 weeks (n = 2). The
monkeys were anesthetized initially with an intramuscular injection of
ketamine hydrochloride (1520 mg/kg) and acepromazine maleate
(0.150.2 mg/kg), and a superficial vein was cannulated. All
subsequent surgical procedures, including a tracheotomy and a small
craniotomy and durotomy over the operculum of V1, were carried out
under sodium thiopental anesthesia (2.5% solution). Each animal was
given an initial injection of between 10 and 15 mg/kg. During the
surgical procedures small amounts of the anesthetic were given every 5
to 10 minutes to maintain a deep level of anesthesia, that is, the
corneal blink reflex and the withdrawal reflex produced by a paw-pad
pinch were completely suppressed. After all surgical procedures, the
animals were paralyzed by an intravenous (i.v.) infusion of pancuronium
bromide (a loading dose of 0.10.2 mg/kg, followed by a continuous
infusion at the rate of 0.1 to 0.2 mg/kg/h). The animals were
artificially respired with a mixture of 59% N2O,
39% O2, and 2% CO2 to
maintain an end-tidal CO2 between 4.0% and
4.5%. The core body temperature of the monkeys was kept at 37.6°C.
Throughout the recording session, the anesthesia was monitored and
maintained by the continuous i.v. infusion of sodium pentobarbital
(24 mg/kg/h). Cycloplegia was produced by 1% atropine sulfate, and
the animals corneas were protected with rigid, gas permeable,
extended-wear contact lenses. Retinoscopy was used to determine the
contact lens parameters required to focus the eyes on the stimulus
screens.
Recording and Response Analysis Procedures
Tungsten-in-glass microelectrodes were used to isolate activity
from single cortical neurons. Action potentials were extracellularly
recorded and amplified using conventional technology. The neurons
responses, converted into standard pulses by a window discriminator,
were sampled at a rate of 100 Hz (10-msec bin widths) by a laboratory
computer and compiled into peristimulus time histograms (PSTHs) that
were equal in duration to, and synchronized with, the temporal cycle of
the sine-wave grating. The amplitudes and phases of the temporal
response components in the PSTHs were determined by Fourier analysis.
In all experiments, the stimuli were presented multiple times in a
randomly ordered sequence.
For each isolated neuron, the receptive fields were mapped for both
eyes and ocular dominance was determined using handheld stimuli. These
procedures were followed by quantitative measurements using drifting
sine-wave gratings (temporal frequency = 3.1 Hz; contrast =
0.3). Cells were classified as simple or complex on the basis of the
temporal characteristics of their responses to a drifting sinusoidal
grating of the optimal spatial frequency and
orientation.13
The optimal orientation and preferred
direction of stimulus drift were determined from the units
orientation response function obtained with a near-optimal spatial
frequency. At the optimal orientation and direction, a spatial
frequency response function was measured to determine the cells
optimal spatial frequency.
Measurement of Binocular Suppression
The details of the methods for determining the prevalence and the
magnitude of binocular suppression are illustrated in Figure 1 . Briefly, responses were collected for dichoptic sine-wave gratings of
the optimal spatial frequency as a function of the relative interocular
spatial phase of the grating pairs. To create interocularly rivaling
stimuli, the orientation of the gratings presented to the nondominant
eye was rotated by 90°. Monocular stimuli for each eye and one
zero-contrast control were included in each stimulus parameter file.
For descriptive and analytical purposes, a single cycle of a sine wave
was fit to each neurons phase tuning function.8
12
14
15
To determine whether binocular signal interactions were suppressive in
nature, we calculated the ratio of the mean binocular response
amplitude/dominant monocular response amplitude (B/M). Because the
great majority of V1 neurons in adult monkeys show B/M ratios near a
value of 1.0 when interocularly orthogonal stimuli are presented, we
operationally defined "suppressive" units as those having B/M
values of 0.8 or less (an arbitrary, conservative criterion that was 2
SEs below the mean B/M value of 1.0 for adult monkeys). In addition,
the amplitude of the fitted sine wave was used to calculate the degree
of binocular interaction ([BII], binocular interaction index =
amplitude of the fitted sine wave/the average response
amplitude).8
12
14

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Figure 1. Top: Schematic illustration of the experimental
procedures. A pair of identical drifting sinusoidal gratings (temporal
frequency, 3.1 Hz; contrast, 3050%) with optimal monocular
parameters for each cell (i.e., orientation, direction of drift, and
spatial frequency) were presented to an isolated V1 neuron.
Bottom: Determination of the nature of binocular signal
interactions in a representative unit from an 8-week-old monkey. The
relative spatial phase between the two gratings was changed in 22.5°
steps, and binocular response amplitudes were determined as a function
of relative phase disparity. The resulting function was fit with a
single cycle of sine wave from which a binocular interaction index
(BII), the cells relative sensitivity to interocular image disparity,
was calculated. To determine whether binocular interactions were
excitatory or suppressive in nature, the ratio of the mean binocular
response amplitude over the dominant monocular amplitude (B/M) was
calculated. The measurements were made with interocularly iso-oriented
and orthogonal gratings. Monocular response levels for the left (L) and
right (R) eyes are indicated by the filled triangles.
The cells maintained firing rate is indicated by the open
triangle. Dotted line, the mean binocular
response; solid line, the dominant monocular response.
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Histology
To identify our recording sites, small electrolytic lesions were
produced at several locations along the electrode track by passing
current through the electrode (5 µA for <5 seconds, electrode tip
negative). At the end of the recording experiments, an overdose of
sodium pentobarbital (100 mg/kg) was administered intravenously to
induce a deep level of anesthesia, and the animals were killed by a
perfusion through the heart with an aldehyde fixative (2%
paraformaldehyde and 0.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH
7.4). The brain was removed immediately and kept overnight in fixative
with 20% sucrose. The tissue was cut in 40-µm sections on a freezing
microtome in the tangential, frontal, or sagittal plane. The sections
were used to identify recording sites for laminae analysis and to
investigate the histochemical changes that occur during early
development in V1. Cytochrome oxidase (CO) staining and Nissl staining
techniques were used to reconstruct our electrode tracks and to
estimate the location of individual cells with respect to the neuronal
layers in V1.
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Results
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High Prevalence of Binocular Cross-orientation Suppression in
Infants
The majority of V1 neurons in young infant monkeys exhibited clear
interocular cross-orientation suppression. For the representative cell
from a 2-week-old infant monkey shown in Figure 2A
, the binocular responses to an iso-oriented grating pair (left) varied
systematically with the relative interocular spatial phase disparity as
in mature monkeys, and the mean binocular response amplitude was
greater than the dominant monocular response amplitude (B/M =
1.32). However, when interocularly orthogonal stimuli were presented to
the nondominant eye (right), the sensitivity of the unit to interocular
spatial phase disparities disappeared and the cells mean binocular
response amplitude was significantly lower than that of the dominant
monocular response amplitude, showing unambiguous binocular
cross-orientation suppression (B/M = 0.51).

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Figure 2. Examples of binocular suppression in units from 2-week-old infant
monkeys under binocularly iso-oriented (left column) and
orthogonal (right column) conditions. The cell in the
top panel (A) showed normal binocular
interactions for iso-oriented stimuli, that is, clear disparity
sensitivity (BII = 0.91) and excitatory interactions (B/M =
1.32). For the orthogonal condition, however, the B/M ratio was nearly
half as large as the dominant monocular amplitude (B/M = 0.51).
The cell in the lower panel (B) showed strong
binocular suppression for both the iso-oriented and orthogonal
conditions. The format and conventions are as in Figure 1B
.
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Suppressive interactions were occasionally found even for iso-oriented
gratings in 2- and 4-week-old infants. For example, the complex cell
from a 2-week-old monkey in Figure 2B
was not disparity sensitive, but
the binocular response amplitudes for all interocular spatial phase
disparities were clearly lower than the better monocular response
amplitude (B/M = 0.53). The ocular dominance of this unit was 1.0
(apparently "monocular" and contralateral-dominant). However,
dichoptic gratings initiated a very strong interocular suppression at
all spatial phases. The data indicate that the influence of the left
eye was subthreshold and inhibitory. Subthreshold binocular
interactions, excitatory or inhibitory, are common in V1 units of
cats14
15
and monkeys.8
12
16
Presenting an orthogonally oriented grating to the nondominant eye did
not alter the cells disparity sensitivity and produced binocular
cross-orientation suppression that was similar in magnitude (B/M =
0.58) to that found for iso-oriented stimuli.
A higher proportion of V1 units in young infant monkeys exhibited
interocular cross-orientation suppression than in adults. The
population data in Figure 3
show the distributions of units as a function of the B/M values for the
interocularly iso-oriented (left) and orthogonal (right) gratings. We
operationally defined "suppressive units" as neurons having
monocular/binocular ratios less than 0.8. For iso-oriented stimuli the
distributions for adults and for any of the infant groups were not
significant (
2 test, P >
0.2).

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Figure 3. The prevalence of binocular suppression as a function of age.
Distributions of the mean monocular/binocular response ratios (B/M) for
interocularly iso-oriented (left column) and orthogonal
gratings (right column) for each age group. The units
with ratios < 0.8 were considered to be suppressive and are shown
as filled histograms. The proportion of interocularly
suppressive units (%) is also indicated for each panel. , mean
values.
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However, before 8 weeks of age very high proportions of the units in
infant monkeys showed suppressive binocular interactions to
interocularly orthogonal stimuli. By 8 weeks of age, the prevalence of
binocular cross-orientation suppression (40%) was just slightly higher
than that in normal adults. Approximately 30% of the units in adults
showed binocular cross-orientation suppression, which is similar to the
proportion previously reported for adult cats.17
The
differences between adult monkeys and 1-, 2-, and 4-week-old infants
were significant (
2 test, P =
0.027 for 1 week, P < 0.0001 for 2 and 4 weeks).
However, the distribution of units for 8-week-old infants was not
significantly different from that for adults (P >
0.2). The differences between the iso-oriented and orthogonal stimulus
conditions within the same age were significant for 1-, 2-, and
4-week-old infants (P = 0.036, P <
0.005, P < 0.001, respectively) but not for 8 week-old
infants or adults (P > 0.1 and P >
0.7, respectively). Interestingly, approximately 20% of the units in
1-week-old infants showed relatively strong excitatory binocular
interactions (i.e., B/M > 1.2) for interocularly orthogonal
stimuli. However, the overall proportions of binocularly suppressive
versus facilitatory units in 1-week-old infants were not significantly
different from those for 2-week-old monkeys (
2
test, P = 0.085).
To understand the nature of binocular cross-orientation suppression in
V1 units of young infant monkeys, we manipulated the degree of
interocular orientation differences by presenting pairs of gratings
that differed in orientation by 45° between the two eyes in addition
to pairs of orthogonally oriented gratings (Fig. 4)
. We found that the magnitude of binocular suppression was closely
associated with a cells monocular orientation tuning and could be
predicted by how well the binocular stimulus orientations matched the
preferred orientation for each cell. The data for a complex cell from a
4-week-old monkey that are shown in Figure 4A
demonstrate that a
relatively small deviation from the optimal orientation results in a
substantial drop in the monocular/binocular response ratio and that the
binocular interaction bandwidth was similar to that of the respective
monocular orientation bandwidth. In virtually all units where we
examined this relationship, there was a clear association between
binocular interaction bandwidth and orientation tuning bandwidth
(r = 0.72, P < 0.01, Fig. 4B
).

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Figure 4. (A) Orientation tuning (left) and binocular
interaction (right) functions for a complex cell from a
4-week-old monkey. The tuning bandwidth was defined as the full width
at one half of the peak value. The binocular interaction functions were
obtained by plotting the ratios of the maximum () or mean ( )
binocular response amplitudes over the dominant monocular amplitudes as
a function of the interocular differences in stimulus orientation. The
stimulus orientation for the dominant eye was always kept at the
cells optimal orientation. (B) A scatter plot showing the
relationship between orientation bandwidth and binocular interaction
bandwidth for a population of cells from 2- and 4-week-old monkeys
(r = 0.72, P < 0.01).
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Eye Dominance versus Binocular Suppression in Simple and Complex
Cells
There is considerable interest in the ocularity of cortical
neurons that are suppressed by interocularly rivaling stimuli in
adults.18
19
20
Figure 5
shows that for all ages, binocular cross-orientation suppression is
strong regardless of an units ocular dominance index (ODI), that is,
whether a cell is strongly dominated by one eye (ODI = 0.0 or
1.0), binocularly balanced (ODI = 0.5), showing contralateral eye
dominance (0.5 < ODI > 0.0) or ipsilateral eye dominance
(1.0 < ODI > 0.5). However, before 8 weeks of age
relatively higher proportion of complex cells were binocularly driven,
and these cells generally exhibited a higher degree of interocular
suppression than simple cells.

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Figure 5. Scatter plots showing the B/M values of individual units as a function
of their ODI values (ocular dominance index) for each age group. ODI
values of 0.0 represent monocular cells exclusively excited by the
contralateral eye, whereas 1.0 signifies ipsilateral monocular
dominance. The ODI values were calculated by comparing the peak
monocular response amplitudes for right and the left eye stimulation
during the measurement of the spatial frequency tuning functions.
Open bars signify the average values for units within
0.2 intervals. Note that before 8 weeks of age complex cells () in
infant monkeys exhibited more balanced ODI values and greater binocular
suppression than simple cells ( ).
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Figure 6
illustrates a scatter plot for the monocular/binocular ratio of each
unit as a function of its binocular interaction index (BII). The BII
values were obtained for a pair of iso-oriented sine-wave gratings. The
prevalence and magnitude of suppression for the interocularly
orthogonal gratings were not systematically related to a units
disparity sensitivity (BII) measured with iso-oriented gratings for
either simple or complex cells.

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Figure 6. Scatter plots showing the B/M values of individual units as a function
of the BII (binocular interaction index) values. , simple cells;
, complex cells. Data points that fall on the graph frame
indicate values that exceeded the maxima for the x and
y axes.
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Neuronal Layers and Binocular Suppression
Figure 7
shows the average (±SE) binocular/monocular ratios of individual
neurons in response to iso-oriented (open circles) and orthogonal
(filled circles) gratings for different neuronal layers. The neuronal
layers were estimated from the normalized depths of the recording sites
and the Nissl- and CO-stained histologic sections of V1 (Fig. 8)
. The most striking finding was that in infant monkeys, cells in and
around layer IVB consistently showed a large degree of binocular
suppression for orthogonal stimuli.

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Figure 7. The average B/M values (±SE) as a function of laminar position for
each age group. The relative recording depth was used to estimate a
cells neuronal layer (Fig. 8)
. , the responses of units to
interocularly iso-oriented stimuli; , the responses of the same
units to interocularly orthogonal stimuli.
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Figure 8. Changes in histochemical reactivity in V1 as a function of age. For
each age group, Nissl- (left) and cytochrome oxidase
(right)stained sagittal sections are illustrated.
Neuronal layers are marked according to Hässler
(left) and Brodmann (right). , the
location of layer IVCß (4ß) in 1-, 2-, and 4-week-old monkeys.
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Figure 8
illustrates the CO staining in V1 for representative monkeys
at each age. The most obvious histochemical immaturity was that before
8 weeks of age, the CO staining of layer IVß (IVCß) was pale.
Similar findings were reported previously for V1 of newborn
monkeys.7
The present results indicate, however, that this
type of immaturity continues to be present for at least the first 4
weeks of life.
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Discussion
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The most important finding of this study was that binocular
cross-orientation suppression is far more prevalent in monkey V1 before
8 weeks of age than in adulthood.
Origins of Binocular Suppression in Infant V1
In the adult cat visual cortex, interocular
cross-orientation suppression was thought to originate in the
LGN.17
The present results indicate that the observed
interocular suppression in young infant monkeys originates within the
striate cortex. Specifically, binocular suppression was more common and
stronger in complex cells than in simple cells of 2- and 4-week-old
infants (Figs. 5 and 6)
, and neurons in layer IVB exhibited the most
consistent and largest interocular suppression to interocularly
orthogonal stimuli although the same units showed typically high
degrees of binocular facilitation for iso-oriented stimuli (Fig. 7)
.
Moreover, the magnitude of the reduction in the monocular/binocular
response ratio for a given unit was correlated with the units
orientation tuning (Fig. 4)
. All these findings are consistent with the
hypothesis that the observed interocular suppression in monkeys
originates at or after the binocular combination of signals in V1.
Why do V1 units of young infant monkeys show a higher prevalence of
binocular cross-orientation suppression than those in adult monkeys?
The major reason may be found in the relative immaturity of the
excitatory binocular connections in infant monkeys before 4 to
6 weeks of age. Specifically, the excitatory connections from the two
eyes, whether they are the feed forward receptive-field generating
projections or the intrinsic-local and long-range horizontal
connections, are relatively immature compared with those in
adults.8
9
21
However, the generally orientation
"insensitive" inhibitory connections, particularly the intrinsic
long-range horizontal connections, have been reported to function
relatively more vigorously during early infancy.22
23
Consequently, changing stimulus orientation from a neurons preferred
stimulus orientation may reduce the overall binocular excitatory drive
without a concomitant reduction in binocular inhibitory signals. As a
result, the binocular response rate would decrease as the stimulus
orientation disparity between the two eyes increases (Fig. 4)
. A
similar imbalance between binocular excitatory and inhibitory inputs
was proposed to explain the high prevalence of interocular
suppression in V1 neurons of strabismic cats24
25
26
and
monkeys.16
27
In a related matter, the distribution of B/M values under
orthogonal conditions for 1-week-old monkeys appears to be different
from those for other young infants, specifically, 20% of the units
showed relatively strong excitatory binocular interactions (i.e.,
B/M > 1.2). This may be also due to immaturities in the
receptive-field properties of many V1 units in 1-week-old monkeys.
Specifically, the spatial tuning of V1 units is broader and their
direction/orientation selectivity is exceptionally low in neonates
compared with older infants and adults.8
9
The lower
orientation/direction selectivity of V1 units may arise because of
subnormal spatial summation of geniculate signals, which may be
associated with the immature afferent LGN axon arbors in neonates and
young infants.28
29
As a result, stronger excitatory
signals from the two eyes may be more readily summated in those
particular units, despite interocular differences in stimulus
orientation. Our finding of reduced direction/orientation selectivity
in V1 units is consistent with a report that neonates fail to
discriminate the direction of moving stimuli30
and a
recent finding by Birch et al.31
that the nasotemporal
MVEP asymmetry, prevalent in young infants, is absent in neonates.
VEP Studies in Infants
The present findings substantially differ from the results
of a recent VEP study that showed that human infants between 5 and 15
months of age (roughly equivalent to 5 and 15 weeks of age in monkeys)
showed much weaker interocular suppression than
adults.11
The source of this discrepancy between the two
studies is not immediately clear. The most obvious difference
between the two studies is that their experiments were conducted in
awake human infants, whereas our study was done in anesthetized and
paralyzed monkeys. Although both studies used sine-wave gratings of
relatively high contrast, the VEP study used contrast-reversal compared
with the drifting gratings used in this study. However, it is somewhat
difficult to conceive of how these technical differences may result in
the differing results.
A more likely explanation may be found in the differences in the
nature of signals that are recorded in the VEP versus single-unit
studies. Previously, in the kitten visual cortex, monocular
cross-orientation inhibition was shown to be present in almost all
units as early as 4 weeks of age,32
whereas another study
using VEP in cats could not reveal cross-orientation inhibition until 6
weeks of age.33
In addition to the fact that the VEP
integrates signals from a large population of cells, VEP responses
reflect changes in dendritic and somatic membrane potentials and thus
may not necessarily correlate well with cross-orientation inhibition
measured with action potentials from individual
units.32
34
A similar explanation may apply here for the
differences between the two studies with respect to the prevalence of
binocular cross-orientation suppression in young infant primates.
Implications for Perceptual Binocular Rivalry in Infants
The inability to demonstrate binocular cross-orientation
inhibition with the VEP has been taken as evidence that young infants
do not experience perceptual binocular rivalry. This differs
significantly from the claims that were made in earlier psychophysical
studies.1
35
Our experiment was not designed to resolve
the controversy regarding whether young infants perceive
binocular rivalry. However, the results from this study may clarify
some of the important issues associated with binocular rivalry in
infants.
In adults, there is considerable disagreement among investigators
concerning how perceptual rivalry is generated. Binocular rivalry has
traditionally been considered to be an integral part of binocular
visual functions because it was thought to reflect an interocular
competition for perceptual eye dominance.18
20
According
to this idea, spontaneous alterations in interocular suppression of
neuronal activity at early stages of binocular processing (e.g., V1 and
V2) are required for experiencing binocular rivalry.20
On
the other hand, an increasing number of studies indicate that rivalry
is a "multistable phenomenon" of perceptual dominance, not only
between the two eyes but also within the same eye, and thus, it
requires higher level "perceptual" processes beyond the binocular
signal combination found at early cortical
sites.11
19
36
37
38
There is a general agreement among
investigators, however, that suppressive neuronal interactions between
at least two groups of neurons at some stage of cortical processing,
either between the two eyes or within the same eye, are
required for perceptual rivalry.11
19
20
25
Our data
indicate that neurons of V1 in young infant monkeys are capable of
initiating interocular suppression whenever confronted with
interocularly unmatched stimuli. Moreover, this interocular
cross-orientation suppression in V1 is more prevalent and stronger in
young infants than in adults. The bottom line is that before the
emergence of stereopsis, infants may detect the differences between
interocularly iso-oriented gratings and orthogonal
gratings.35
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Acknowledgements
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The authors thank Professor Akihiko Tamai for his continuing
support.
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Footnotes
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2 Present address: Department of Ophthalmology, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, Yonago, Japan. 
Supported by National Institutes of Health Grants RO1 EY-08128, EY-03611, and RR-07146.
Submitted for publication May 16, 2000; revised August 2, 2000; accepted August 14, 2000.
Commercial relationships policy: N.
Corresponding author: Yuzo Chino, College of Optometry, University of Houston, 4901 Calhoun Street, Houston, TX 77204-6052. ychino{at}uh.edu
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