Birds have a well-developed centrifugal pathway
from the isthmo-optic nucleus to the retina. In the present
study, receptive-field properties of the isthmo-optic (IO)
neurons and suppressive effect of remote stimuli far beyond
the “classical” receptive fields were examined
electrophysiologically in the Japanese quail. Receptive
fields emitting more than half the maximal ON–OFF
response to a small spot of light measured 4.3 ±
1.9 deg (n = 37) in diameter.
A stationary spot of light was presented at a remote point
(35–76 deg) away from the receptive-field center,
besides a stimulus for the receptive-field center, with
various onset time difference. The peripheral spot, when
turned on 50–100 ms before the center spot, maximally
suppressed the ON and OFF responses to the center spot.
In most of the IO neurons examined (13 out of 15 units),
even small remote stimuli (2–5 deg in diameter) significantly
suppressed the ON–OFF responses to the center stimulus.
The suppressive effects of remote stimuli were seen to
be extended to, at least, two thirds of the entire visual
field of a single eye. Such wide suppressive fields indicate
that the IO neurons may compete with each other for activity
in a very long-range scale. Simulation using a simple static
model based on three basic principles of processing of
the centrifugal visual system— topographical input,
long-range competition, and local gain enhancement—suggests
that the system could function as an autonomous mechanism
for attentional object selection.