TY - JOUR PY - 2016// TI - Elaboration of the visual pathways from the study of war-related cranial injuries: the period from the Russo-Japanese War to World War I JO - Frontiers of neurology and neuroscience A1 - Lanska, Douglas J. SP - 31 EP - 42 VL - 38 IS - N2 - As a result of the wars in the early 20th century, elaboration of the visual pathways was greatly facilitated by the meticulous study of visual defects in soldiers who had suffered focal injuries to the visual cortex. Using relatively crude techniques, often under difficult wartime circumstances, investigators successfully mapped key features of the visual pathways. Studies during the Russo- Japanese War (1904-1905) by Tatsuji Inouye (1881-1976) and during World War I by Gordon Holmes (1876-1965), William Lister (1868-1944), and others produced increasingly refined retinotopic maps of the primary visual cortex, which were later supported and refined by studies during and after World War II. Studies by George Riddoch (1888-1947) during World War I also demonstrated that some patients could still perceive motion despite blindness caused by damage to their visual cortex and helped to establish the concept of functional partitioning of visual processes in the occipital cortex.

© 2016 S. Karger AG, Basel.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 1660-4431 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000442567 ID - ref1 ER -