Summary
We raised monocularly deprived kittens in visual environments with low level illumination that was either steady or flickering. With steady scotopic luminance ocular dominance shifted as it does in normal photopic lighting. In flickering light with an average frequency of 2 Hz there was virtually no ocular dominance shift, while in flickering light averaging 0.1 Hz there was a significant shift. Recordings from the 2 Hz flicker-reared were similar to the dark-reared recordings. The flickering illumination was produced in one case by a high contrast-low brightness TV near the cage, and in another case, by a low voltage incandescent bulb driven by a pseudo-random sequence generator. This circuit delivered either a maximum ON time of 1.7 s or a maximum of 40 s, for the 2 Hz and 0.1 Hz respectively. Both the TV and flickering bulb produced average illumination comparable to the dim (0.01 cd/ m2) steady scotopic illumination. We conclude that dim flickering light is not a sufficient stimulus for promoting ocular dominance shift in kittens in the critical period unless the flicker rate approaches 0.1 Hz. Furthermore results from the TV rearing suggest that flicker may be capable of preventing an ocular dominance shift expected from a concurrent steady low light level background.
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This work was supported by ONR Contract N00014-81-K-0136. Flaxedil was supplied by Lederle Laboratories. We thank K. Cullen, M. Sutter, J. Kape and M. Motuz for technical assistance. L.N. Cooper and J.P. Rauschecker provided helpful comments.
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Daniels, J.D., Pressman, E., Schwartz, M. et al. Effects of luminance and flicker on ocular dominance shift in kitten visual cortex. Exp Brain Res 54, 186–190 (1984). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00235830
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00235830