Abstract

Hooded rats were trained on a series of four visual discrimination tasks in a Y-maze, and subjected to a variety of posterior cortical lesions. In 17 animals this consisted of an extensive aspiration lesion contralateral to a more superficial lesion made by laminar thermocoagulation and centered over the striate area. After operation the animals were tested on the same problem series. The behavioral deficit in this group varied with the extent and depth of the thermal lesion, and six animals with very superficial thermal lesions displayed an isolated difficulty in solving an encircled triangle problem. This deficit seemed to be referable to widespread involvement of supragranular cortex, and specifically of layer I of area striata which receives an input from the nonspecific thalamocortical afferents. The possible influence of various interlaminar projections upon underlying vertically-oriented cell columns as a mechanism for the mediation of 'selective attention' was discussed.

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