Richard Ravizza's research while affiliated with Pennsylvania State University and other places

What is this page?


This page lists the scientific contributions of an author, who either does not have a ResearchGate profile, or has not yet added these contributions to their profile.

It was automatically created by ResearchGate to create a record of this author's body of work. We create such pages to advance our goal of creating and maintaining the most comprehensive scientific repository possible. In doing so, we process publicly available (personal) data relating to the author as a member of the scientific community.

If you're a ResearchGate member, you can follow this page to keep up with this author's work.

If you are this author, and you don't want us to display this page anymore, please let us know.

Publications (7)


Extrinsic visual and auditory cortical connections in the 4-Day-old kitten
  • Article

October 1984

·

10 Reads

·

36 Citations

The Journal of Comparative Neurology

Paul Cornwell

·

Richard Ravizza

·

Bertram Payne

The major extrinsic projections to and from the visual and auditory cortical areas were examined in 4-day-old kittens using axonal transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and/or tritiated proline. Six different afferent and seven different efferent systems were studied; all 13 were present by postnatal day 4 as revealed by either HRP, or autoradiography alone, or these two techniques combined. Topographical projections were found for the corticopetal pathways from the thalamus and claustrum and for the corticofugal pathways to the thalamus, claustrum, striatum, and tectum, as well as for the inter- and intrahemispheric pathways. No topographical relations were seen in projections to the cortex from the basal ganglia or the lower brainstem. The results of the present study indicate that most or all of the major extrinsic connections of the kitten's visual and auditory cortical areas are present neonatally, and that both the cells of origin and the axonal targets are arranged topographically much like those of adult cats. However, the origins of callosal projections from visual cortex are more widespread in newborn kittens than in adult cats. In addition, the laminar arrangements of the kitten's corticocortical connections differ from those of adult cats in a number of details. The results suggest that the sparing of some visual and auditory functions after neonatal lesions occurs despite the fact that the cortical areas removed have formed extrinsic connections.

Share

Social dominance determines estrous entrainment among female hamsters

July 1980

·

16 Reads

·

67 Citations

Hormones and Behavior

In order to study the phenomenon of estrous entrainment and its relation to social behavior two studies were conducted with female hamsters. In the first experiment single females were placed in close proximity, but not in direct contact with three other females whose estrous cycles were already synchronous. The single female was either in phase (control) or out of phase (experimental) with the synchronous females. In the second experiment two females at the same (control) or different (experimental) points in their estrous cycles lived together until entrainment occurred. Their social interactions during the initial 30 min in this shared habitat were observed and a dominance hierarchy established. Estrous stage was determined daily for each animal by vaginal lavage. The major findings of these studies are (1) estrous entrainment occurred in all female hamsters whether living in close proximity (Expt I), or living together (Expt II); (2) regardless of the stage of estrous at the start of cohabitation, hamsters' cycles may be either accelerated or decelerated depending on whether the partner's stage is ahead or behind their own; (3) social interaction appears to accelerate the entrainment process, and (4) when examined in light of social dominance, the behaviorally submissive animals entrained to the behaviorally dominant animals.


Spatial abilities, sex differences, and lateral eye movements
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

July 1979

·

8 Reads

·

46 Citations

Developmental Psychology

Conducted 2 experiments with 91 female and 50 male undergraduates to examine relationships among the ability to determine horizontality, a general test of spatial abilities, and hemispheric activation measured lateral eye movements. Females who could determine horizontality were more likely to demonstrate a right-hemispheric mode of processing indexed by direction of lateral eye movements. Overall, the ability to determine horizontality was positively correlated with a general measure of spatial ability for the right-hemispheric females but not for the left-hemispheric females. For males, there was a high positive correlation between the horizontality task and the spatial ability measure, regardless of hemispheric mode of processing. (12 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)

View access options


Auditory Forebrain: Evidence from Anatomical and Behavioral Experiments Involving Human and Animal Subjects

January 1978

·

3 Reads

·

24 Citations

In recent years, careful utilization of experimental and clinical data has permitted new insights into the basic organization of mammalian forebrain. The intent of the present chapter is to examine one aspect of this inquiry: the structure of auditory forebrain and its role in mammalian hearing. To achieve this goal, the discussion is built around three issues presented in three separate sections.



Citations (5)


... MG lesions alone can block corticosterone release normally induced by noise (Campeau et al. 1997). The fear conditioning results contrast with the effects of auditory forebrain lesions on instrumental tasks ( (Ravizza and Belmore 1978;Whitfield 1979). Auditory forebrain lesions do not impair the analysis of acoustic parameters such as frequency and intensity, but do impair spatial localization and the temporal analysis of acoustic stimuli (Phillips and Farmer 1990). ...

Reference:

Physiological Properties of Neurons in the Medial Geniculate Body
Auditory Forebrain: Evidence from Anatomical and Behavioral Experiments Involving Human and Animal Subjects
  • Citing Chapter
  • January 1978

... However, among right-handed women who had nonright-handed parents and were majoring in scientific fields, mental rotation competence has been found to equal that of men and to surpass that of other women (Casey & Brabeck, 1989). Women mastering horizontality representation have also been judged to display a right hemisphere type of cognitive processing, but not men (Ray, Georgiou, & Ravizza, 1979). ...

Spatial abilities, sex differences, and lateral eye movements

Developmental Psychology

... Structural studies of interhemispheric connections in cat auditory cortex have demonstrated that a large number of transcallosal projections emanating from core auditory areas A1 and AAF terminate in contralateral core auditory fields (Lee and Winer, 2008a). Nearly 90% of these projections arise from layers III and V (Ravizza et al., 1976; Kelly and Wong, 1981; Code and Winer, 1985; Games and Winer, 1988; Lee and Winer, 2008a). Auditory transcallosal projections pass through the central body, posterior body, and dorsal splenium of the corpus callosum (Lomber et al., 1994; Clarke et al., 1995) and terminate throughout layers II–VI in the homotopic cortical locus, with the greatest density of terminals found in layers II and III and with the lowest density of terminals in layer IV (Kelly and Wong, 1981; Code and Winer, 1986; Aitkin et al., 1988). ...

Laminar origin of efferent projections from auditory cortex in Golden Syrian Hamster
  • Citing Article
  • October 1976

Brain Research

... These connectivity patterns likely develop based on genetic blueprints and activity-dependent mechanisms, by which the primary sensory receptor inner hair cells (IHCs) in the mammalian cochlea spontaneously fire action potentials prior to hearing onset [99][100][101][102][103][104] . Therefore, many of the auditory projections are already largely present prior to hearing onset 105 . However, a final refinement of such connectivity is likely to be achieved only as a result of auditory experience 5,12,103,106,107 . ...

Extrinsic visual and auditory cortical connections in the 4-Day-old kitten
  • Citing Article
  • October 1984

The Journal of Comparative Neurology

... This phenomenon, first documented in mice, 49 and later, in dormitory-living women, 33 is called the Whitten effect. It has also been documented in Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus), 34 golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus), 21 and primates (Theropithecus gelada, Leontopithecus rosalia, Pan troglodytes, Homo sapiens, Papio hamadryas). 11, 19,47,48,52 In this study, proestrus and metestrus and diestrus were somewhat synchronized, especially within the same cage (nutria 1-6 in one cage and nutria 7-10 in the second; Table 1). ...

Social dominance determines estrous entrainment among female hamsters
  • Citing Article
  • July 1980

Hormones and Behavior