Literature DB >> 20881198

Electrical stimulation of the frontal eye fields in the head-free macaque evokes kinematically normal 3D gaze shifts.

Jachin A Monteon1, Alina G Constantin, Hongying Wang, Julio Martinez-Trujillo, J Douglas Crawford.   

Abstract

The frontal eye field (FEF) is a region of the primate prefrontal cortex that is central to eye-movement generation and target selection. It has been shown that neurons in this area encode commands for saccadic eye movements. Furthermore, it has been suggested that the FEF may be involved in the generation of gaze commands for the eye and the head. To test this suggestion, we systematically stimulated (with pulses of 300 Hz frequency, 200 ms duration, 30-100 μA intensity) the FEF of two macaques, with the head unrestrained, while recording three-dimensional (3D) eye and head rotations. In a total of 95 sites, the stimulation consistently elicited gaze-orienting movements ranging in amplitude from 2 to 172°, directed contralateral to the stimulation site, and with variable vertical components. These movements were typically a combination of eye-in-head saccades and head-in-space movements. We then performed a comparison between the stimulation-evoked movements and gaze shifts voluntarily made by the animal. The kinematics of the stimulation-evoked movements (i.e., their spatiotemporal properties, their velocity-amplitude relationships, and the relative contributions of the eye and the head as a function of movement amplitude) were very similar to those of natural gaze shifts. Moreover, they obeyed the same 3D constraints as the natural gaze shifts (i.e., modified Listing's law for eye-in-head movements). As in natural gaze shifts, saccade and vestibuloocular reflex torsion during stimulation-evoked movements were coordinated so that at the end of the head movement the eye-in-head ended up in Listing's plane. In summary, movements evoked by stimulation of the FEF closely resembled those of naturally occurring eye-head gaze shifts. Thus we conclude that the FEF explicitly encodes gaze commands and that the kinematic aspects of eye-head coordination are likely specified by downstream mechanisms.

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20881198     DOI: 10.1152/jn.01032.2009

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


  9 in total

1.  Saccades evoked in response to electrical stimulation of the posterior bank of the arcuate sulcus.

Authors:  E Neromyliotis; A K Moschovakis
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2017-06-20       Impact factor: 1.972

2.  Eye-head-hand coordination during visually guided reaches in head-unrestrained macaques.

Authors:  Harbandhan Kaur Arora; Vishal Bharmauria; Xiaogang Yan; Saihong Sun; Hongying Wang; John Douglas Crawford
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2019-09-18       Impact factor: 2.714

3.  Vestibulocollic reflexes in the absence of head postural control.

Authors:  Patrick A Forbes; Gunter P Siegmund; Riender Happee; Alfred C Schouten; Jean-Sébastien Blouin
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2014-07-09       Impact factor: 2.714

4.  Contribution of the frontal eye field to gaze shifts in the head-unrestrained rhesus monkey: neuronal activity.

Authors:  T A Knight
Journal:  Neuroscience       Date:  2012-09-01       Impact factor: 3.590

5.  A cortical substrate for memory-guided orienting in the rat.

Authors:  Jeffrey C Erlich; Max Bialek; Carlos D Brody
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2011-10-20       Impact factor: 17.173

6.  Evidence for a functional subdivision of Premotor Ear-Eye Field (Area 8B).

Authors:  Marco Lanzilotto; Vincenzo Perciavalle; Cristina Lucchetti
Journal:  Front Behav Neurosci       Date:  2015-01-30       Impact factor: 3.558

7.  Visual-Motor Transformations Within Frontal Eye Fields During Head-Unrestrained Gaze Shifts in the Monkey.

Authors:  Amirsaman Sajad; Morteza Sadeh; Gerald P Keith; Xiaogang Yan; Hongying Wang; John Douglas Crawford
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2014-12-09       Impact factor: 5.357

8.  Transition from Target to Gaze Coding in Primate Frontal Eye Field during Memory Delay and Memory-Motor Transformation.

Authors:  Amirsaman Sajad; Morteza Sadeh; Xiaogang Yan; Hongying Wang; John Douglas Crawford
Journal:  eNeuro       Date:  2016-04-13

Review 9.  Spatiotemporal transformations for gaze control.

Authors:  Amirsaman Sajad; Morteza Sadeh; John Douglas Crawford
Journal:  Physiol Rep       Date:  2020-08
  9 in total

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