EFFECTS OF PERCEPTUAL ISOLATION ON THE CNS
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Abstract
The hypothesis that the mechanism underlying the
effects of perceptual isolation is the sensitization of
the nervous system by “functional" deafferentation was
tested by recording evoked potentials from the optic lobe
of the pigeon before and after one eye had undergone
pattern deprivation.
It was found that before isolation, the second
peak of the evoked potential was reduced by background
illumination, but after Isolation, it was not. There was
no clear indication of change in the absolute amplitudes
of the potentials after isolation.
These results suggest that an interpretation of
the effects of isolation in terms of denervation supersensitivity is oversimplified.
A second finding was that in the normal anesthetized bird, background illumination potentiated the phatically evoked potential.'\