Komatsu, H. &
Murakami, I. (1994).
Behavioral evidence of filling-in at the blind spot of the monkey.
Visual Neuroscience, 11, 1103-1113.
In human subjects, the blind spot is perceptually filled-in by
color and brightness from the surrounding visual field. The
present behavioral study examined the occurrence of color
filling-in at the blind spot in monkeys. First, the location of the
blind spot was determined using a monocular saccade task. The
blind spots were located on the horizontal meridian at
approximately 15-17 deg from the fixation point in the temporal
visual field. Then, filling-in at the blind spot was tested by
determining if the monkey could discriminate between an annulus
presented on the blind spot and a homogeneous disk in the normal
visual field. In this task, the monkey was required to make a
saccade to a homogeneous disk of the same color and size as an
annulus presented simultaneously in the opposite field. Both
stimuli were large enough to cover the blind spot and the inner
circle of the annulus was confined inside the blind spot. All four
monkeys tested performed this task correctly in over 80% of the
trials. However, when one eye was covered and the annulus was
presented on the blind spot of the uncovered eye, performance
deteriorated significantly. To confirm that these results
reflected filling-in, one monkey was trained to maintain fixation
when two identical homogeneous disks appeared in opposite
visual fields. When only one eye was uncovered, and the annulus
was presented on the blind spot of the uncovered eye, the monkey
maintained fixation in most of the trials. These results show
that monkeys were unable to distinguish an annulus from a
homogeneous disk when the annulus was presented on the blind
spot. This indicates that color filling-in occurs at the blind spot
in monkeys and opens possibility to physiological experiments to
study the neural mechanisms of filling-in.