Literature DB >> 12612015

The time course of perisaccadic receptive field shifts in the lateral intraparietal area of the monkey.

Makoto Kusunoki1, Michael E Goldberg.   

Abstract

Neurons in the lateral intraparietal area of the monkey (LIP) have visual receptive fields in retinotopic coordinates when studied in a fixation task. However, in the period immediately surrounding a saccade these receptive fields often shift, so that a briefly flashed stimulus outside the receptive field will drive the neurons if the eye movement will bring the spatial location of that vanished stimulus into the receptive field. This is equivalent to a transient shift of the retinal receptive field. The process enables the monkey brain to process a stimulus in a spatially accurate manner after a saccade, even though the stimulus appeared only before the saccade. We studied the time course of this receptive field shift by flashing a task-irrelevant stimulus for 100 ms before, during, or after a saccade. The stimulus could appear in receptive field as defined by the fixation before the saccade (the current receptive field) or the receptive field as defined by the fixation after the saccade (the future receptive field). We recorded the activity of 48 visually responsive neurons in LIP of three hemispheres of two rhesus monkeys. We studied 45 neurons in the current receptive field task, in which the saccade removed the stimulus from the receptive field. Of these neurons 29/45 (64%) showed a significant decrement of response when the stimulus appeared 250 ms or less before the saccade, as compared with their activity during fixation. The average response decrement was 38% for those cells showing a significant (P < 0.05 by t-test) decrement. We studied 39 neurons in the future receptive field task, in which the saccade brought the spatial location of a recently vanished stimulus into the receptive field. Of these 32/39 (82%) had a significant response to stimuli flashed for 100 ms in the future receptive field, even 400 ms before the saccade. Neurons never responded to stimuli moved by the saccade from a point outside the receptive field to another point outside the receptive field. Neurons did not necessarily show any saccadic suppression for stimuli moved from one part of the receptive field to another by the saccade. Stimuli flashed <250 ms before the saccade-evoked responses in both the presaccadic and the postsaccadic receptive fields, resulting in an increase in the effective receptive field size, an effect that we suggest is responsible for perisaccadic perceptual inaccuracies.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12612015     DOI: 10.1152/jn.00519.2002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


  77 in total

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3.  Remapping in human visual cortex.

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5.  Rhesus monkeys mislocalize saccade targets flashed for 100ms around the time of a saccade.

Authors:  S Morgan Jeffries; Makoto Kusunoki; James W Bisley; Ian S Cohen; Michael E Goldberg
Journal:  Vision Res       Date:  2007-05-17       Impact factor: 1.886

6.  Fusion of visual and auditory stimuli during saccades: a Bayesian explanation for perisaccadic distortions.

Authors:  Paola Binda; Aurelio Bruno; David C Burr; Maria C Morrone
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2007-08-08       Impact factor: 6.167

7.  Neural control of visual search by frontal eye field: effects of unexpected target displacement on visual selection and saccade preparation.

Authors:  Aditya Murthy; Supriya Ray; Stephanie M Shorter; Jeffrey D Schall; Kirk G Thompson
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2009-03-04       Impact factor: 2.714

8.  Temporal dynamics of neuronal modulation during exogenous and endogenous shifts of visual attention in macaque area MT.

Authors:  Laura Busse; Steffen Katzner; Stefan Treue
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2008-10-15       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Intrasaccadic suppression is dominated by reduced detector gain.

Authors:  Jon Guez; Adam P Morris; Bart Krekelberg
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2013-01-01       Impact factor: 2.240

10.  The postsaccadic unreliability of gain fields renders it unlikely that the motor system can use them to calculate target position in space.

Authors:  Benjamin Y Xu; Carine Karachi; Michael E Goldberg
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2012-12-20       Impact factor: 17.173

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