Behavioral effects of early rearing conditions and neonatal lesions of the visual cortex in kittens.

Abstract
Kittens with neonatal lesions of the marginal and posterolateral gyri, along with unoperated controls, were reared either in an enriched environment or in laboratory cages. Kittens with lesions were inferior to controls at learning mazes and at discriminating forms and gratings, whether they were raised in enriched or impoverished conditions. Enrichment did not facilitate form or grating discrimination by either normal or operated cats, although such experience facilitated maze learning by both groups. Early enrichment of sensorimotor experience was probably not the cause of the complete sparing of pattern vision after neonatal damage of the visual cortex reported in earlier studies. Discussion centers on task variables and completeness of the lesions as reasons for sparing of vision.