Literature DB >> 15616137

Simultaneous representation of saccade targets and visual onsets in monkey lateral intraparietal area.

Jacqueline Gottlieb1, Makoto Kusunoki, Michael E Goldberg.   

Abstract

The monkey's lateral intraparietal area (LIP) has been associated with attention and saccades. LIP neurons have visual on-responses to objects abruptly appearing in their receptive fields (RFs) and sustained activity preceding saccades to the RF. We studied the relationship between the on-responses and delay activity in LIP using a 'stable-array' task. Monkeys viewed eight distinct, continuously illuminated objects, arranged in a circle with at least one object in the RF. A cue flashed instructing the monkey to make a saccade, after a delay, to the stable object physically matching the cue. The location of the cue was fixed in trial blocks, either in or out of the RF. If the cue was outside the RF, neurons developed delay-period activity tuned for the direction of the saccade target at approximately 190 ms after cue onset. If the cue appeared in the RF, neurons initially responded to cue onset and developed tuning for saccade direction only toward the end of the delay period, 390 ms after cue onset. The cue- and saccade-target responses coexisted throughout a significant portion of the delay period. The results show that visual-on responses and delay-period activity in LIP are functionally separable, and that, although highly selective, the salience representation in LIP can contain more than one object at a time.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15616137      PMCID: PMC2377182          DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhi002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cereb Cortex        ISSN: 1047-3211            Impact factor:   5.357


  19 in total

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  16 in total

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5.  Parietal neurons encode expected gains in instrumental information.

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Review 8.  Neural mechanisms of saccade target selection: gated accumulator model of the visual-motor cascade.

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Review 10.  Multimodal activity in the parietal cortex.

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