Abstract
Cytochrome-oxidase blobs are central to two of the most influential ideas in contemporary visual neuroscience - cortical modularity and parallel processing pathways. In particular, the regular 2D array of cytochrome- oxidase-rich blobs in palmate visual cortex is arguably the most compelling evidence for cortical modularity and has been hypothesized to mark a separate processing stream through the visual cortex. Although previously a variety of mammals have been studied, blobs have only been demonstrated tn the visual cortex of primates, which has led to the conclusion that blobs represent a primate-specific feature of visual cortical organization. Here we demonstrate the presence of cytochrome-oxidase blobs in a nonprimate species. Throughout the full tangential extent of layers II-III in cat visual cortex the cytochrome-oxidase staining pattern is distinctly patchy, with the darkly stained blobs forming a regular 2D array. In addition, the blobs in cat visual cortex are functionally related to the underlying ocular dominance columns. The presence of cytochrome-oxidase blobs in the cat clearly demonstrates that they no longer can be considered a primate-specific feature of visual cortical organization.
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Murphy, K. M., Jones, D. G., & Van Sluyters, R. C. (1995). Cytochrome-oxidase blobs in cat primary visual cortex. Journal of Neuroscience, 15(6), 4196–4208. https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.15-06-04196.1995
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