Abstract
Motion pictures were taken of the eyes of monkeys as they learned two-choice visual discriminations. Preoperative gaze patterns were compared to gaze patterns following ablation of visual areas in the temporal and occipital lobes. After inferotemporal and prestriate lesions, monkeys showed increased postoperative staring at the discriminanda on the preferred side, decreased rate of gaze shift from one stimulus to another and, as expected, slower learning.
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