Literature DB >> 22170964

Recruitment of a contralateral head turning synergy by stimulation of monkey supplementary eye fields.

Brendan B Chapman1, Michael A Pace, Sharon L Cushing, Brian D Corneil.   

Abstract

The supplementary eye fields (SEF) are thought to enable higher-level aspects of oculomotor control. The goal of the present experiment was to learn more about the SEF's role in orienting, specifically by examining neck muscle recruitment evoked by stimulation of the SEF. Neck muscle activity was recorded from multiple muscles in two monkeys during SEF stimulation (100 μA, 150-300 ms, 300 Hz, with the head restrained or unrestrained) delivered 200 ms into a gap period, before a visually guided saccade initiated from a central position (doing so avoids confounds between initial position and prestimulation neck muscle activity). SEF stimulation occasionally evoked overt gaze shifts and/or head movements but almost always evoked a response that invariably consisted of a contralateral head turning synergy by increasing activity on contralateral turning muscles and decreasing activity on ipsilateral turning muscles (when background activity was present). Neck muscle responses began well in advance of evoked gaze shifts (~30 ms after stimulation onset, leading gaze shifts by ~40-70 ms on average), started earlier and attained a larger magnitude when accompanied by progressively larger gaze shifts, and persisted on trials without overt gaze shifts. The patterns of evoked neck muscle responses resembled those evoked by frontal eye field (FEF) stimulation, except that response latencies from the SEF were ~10 ms longer. This basic description of the cephalomotor command evoked by SEF stimulation suggests that this structure, while further removed from the motor periphery than the FEF, accesses premotor orienting circuits in the brain stem and spinal cord in a similar manner.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22170964     DOI: 10.1152/jn.00487.2011

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


  6 in total

1.  Small effects of neck torsion on healthy human voluntary eye movements.

Authors:  M Janssen; J de Vries; B K Ischebeck; M A Frens; J N van der Geest
Journal:  Eur J Appl Physiol       Date:  2013-10-06       Impact factor: 3.078

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

Review 3.  The cortex is in overall control of 'voluntary' eye movement.

Authors:  P Pouget
Journal:  Eye (Lond)       Date:  2014-12-05       Impact factor: 3.775

4.  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

5.  Neuronal Encoding of Self and Others' Head Rotation in the Macaque Dorsal Prefrontal Cortex.

Authors:  M Lanzilotto; M Gerbella; V Perciavalle; C Lucchetti
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-08-17       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Interaction between the oculomotor and postural systems during a dual-task: Compensatory reductions in head sway following visually-induced postural perturbations promote the production of accurate double-step saccades in standing human adults.

Authors:  Mathieu Boulanger; Guillaume Giraudet; Jocelyn Faubert
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-03-15       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

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