... factors also generate phenotypic variability within the cortex. For example, the activity from different sensory effectors during development, and throughout life, affects brain organization. Experiments from our laboratory in short-tailed opossums (Monodelphis domestica) in which both eyes were ... before cortical and subcortical connections were formed demonstrate that all of what would be visual cortex contained neurons that were responsive to somatosensory and/ ... auditory stimulation. Thus, sensory domain allocation was dramatically altered (Kahn and Krubitzer, 2002). In addition, architectonically defined V1 was significantly smaller, whereas S1 was significantly larger than in normal animals, ... “V1” received altered projections from cortical and subcortical somatosensory and auditory structures (Karlen et al., 2006). Similar results have been observed in anophthalmic mice (Chabot et al., 2008) and blind mole rats (Cooper ... but the eighth nerve is still present, all of cortex that would normally process auditory inputs contains neurons that respond to visual and somatosensory stimulation, and the size of A1 is significantly reduced, whereas the size of V1 is significantly increased (Hunt et al., 2005). ... , as noted above, alterations in cortical field size and neuronal density are observed in the same species of rat reared in radically different environments (wild-caught vs. laboratory). Thus, loss of ... arrays, loss of sensory-driven activity, or reduced patterns of activity can alter cortical domain allocation, cortical field size, connectivity, and neuronal density....