Abstract
A small group of selected optic fibers were surgically deflected from one tectum into the other, thus creating a novel additional projection originating from a small area of ipsilateral retina. The normal fibers to this “recipient” tectum were also severed so that both the deflected and the normal fibers regrew into this tectum at about the same time. The reinnervation pattern was analyzed by autoradiography and electrophysiologic mapping. Both techniques showed that the deflected fibers and the “normal” fibers failed to intermix. The deflected fibers typically formed several well-defined patches of innervation in roughly the appropriate region of denervated recipient tectum. The normal fibers filled in the remaining uninnervated tectal areas and were completely or nearly completely excluded from the patches occupied by the deflected fibers. This segregation was often quite sharp having an apparent average overlap less than 25–50 μm. The electrophysiology indicated that the projections of both deflected and normal fibers were retinotopically organized but that the mapping by the normal fibers was compressed. This compression, an apparent consequence of being squeezed onto a smaller than normal region of tectum, was similar to that previously observed following ablations of part of the tectum. The negligible surgical damage in the present experiment, however, excludes the kind of cytochemical reorganization previously suggested to produce compression. The findings also provide evidence for a competitive type of interaction between optic fibers.