Article

Nature 404, 841-847 (20 April 2000) | doi:10.1038/35009043; Received 30 December 1999; Accepted 23 February 2000

Induction of visual orientation modules in auditory cortex

Jitendra Sharma, Alessandra Angelucci1 and Mriganka Sur

  1. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology,Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139 , USA
  2. Present address: Department of Visual Science, Institute of Ophthalmology, 11–43 Bath Street , London EC1V 9EL, UK.

Correspondence to: Mriganka Sur Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to M.S. (e-mail: Email: msur@ai.mit.edu).

Modules of neurons sharing a common property are a basic organizational feature of mammalian sensory cortex. Primary visual cortex (V1) is characterized by orientation modules—groups of cells that share a preferred stimulus orientation—which are organized into a highly ordered orientation map. Here we show that in ferrets in which retinal projections are routed into the auditory pathway, visually responsive neurons in 'rewired' primary auditory cortex are also organized into orientation modules. The orientation tuning of neurons within these modules is comparable to the tuning of cells in V1 but the orientation map is less orderly. Horizontal connections in rewired cortex are more patchy and periodic than connections in normal auditory cortex, but less so than connections in V1. These data show that afferent activity has a profound influence on diverse components of cortical circuitry, including thalamocortical and local intracortical connections, which are involved in the generation of orientation tuning, and long-range horizontal connections, which are important in creating an orientation map.

Extra navigation

.

natureproducts


ADVERTISEMENT