Murakami, I.,
Komatsu, H. & Kinoshita, M. (1997).
Perceptual filling-in at the artificial scotoma following a monocular retinal lesion in the monkey.
Visual Neuroscience, 14, 89-101.
Although no visual inputs arise from the blind spot, the same
visual attribute there as in the visual field surrounding the blind
spot is perceived. Because of this remarkable "perceptual
filling-in", a hole corresponding to the blind spot is not
perceived, even when one eye is closed. Does the same
phenomenon occur in the case of a scotoma in which visual inputs
are lost postnatally due to a retinal lesion? We report that it did:
in the macaque monkey, behavioral evidence for filling-in at a
scotoma produced by a laser-induced monocular retinal lesion
was obtained. The visual receptive fields of neurons in the
primary visual cortex (V1) in and around the representation of
the visual field corresponding to the scotoma were also mapped,
and no clear difference between the retinotopic organization of
this part in V1 and that found in the normal visual field was
found. Also, perceptual filling-in was found to occur only two
days after the lesion. These findings suggest that the normal
visual system possesses a mechanism that yields filling-in when
some part of the retina is damaged, and that such a mechanism
requires no topographical reorganization in V1.