Literature DB >> 20080657

Human thalamus contributes to perceptual stability across eye movements.

Florian Ostendorf1, Daniela Liebermann, Christoph J Ploner.   

Abstract

We continuously move our eyes when we inspect a visual scene. Although this leads to a rapid succession of discontinuous and fragmented retinal snapshots, we perceive the world as stable and coherent. Neural mechanisms underlying visual stability may depend on internal monitoring of planned or ongoing eye movements. In the macaque brain, a pathway for the transmission of such signals has been identified that is relayed by central thalamic nuclei. Here, we studied a possible role of this pathway for perceptual stability in a patient with a selective lesion affecting homologous regions of the human thalamus. Compared with controls, the patient exhibited a unilateral deficit in monitoring his eye movements. This deficit was manifest by a systematic inaccuracy both in successive eye movements and in judging the locations of visual stimuli. In addition, perceptual consequences of oculomotor targeting errors were erroneously attributed to external stimulus changes. These findings show that the human brain draws on transthalamic monitoring signals to bridge the perceptual discontinuities generated by our eye movements.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 20080657      PMCID: PMC2824294          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0910742107

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  34 in total

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Authors:  Marc A Sommer; Robert H Wurtz
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Authors:  H Deubel; W X Schneider; B Bridgeman
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Authors:  T Haarmeier; P Thier; M Repnow; D Petersen
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7.  Selective suppression of the magnocellular visual pathway during saccadic eye movements.

Authors:  D C Burr; M C Morrone; J Ross
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1994-10-06       Impact factor: 49.962

8.  Corollary discharge provides accurate eye position information to the oculomotor system.

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9.  Efference copy and corollary discharge: implications for thinking and its disorders.

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  34 in total

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3.  Visual stability.

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Review 4.  Advances in understanding mechanisms of thalamic relays in cognition and behavior.

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7.  Saccadic adaptation to a systematically varying disturbance.

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Review 8.  Disrupted Corollary Discharge in Schizophrenia: Evidence From the Oculomotor System.

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10.  The effect of saccade metrics on the corollary discharge contribution to perceived eye location.

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