Literature DB >> 26448341

Spatial transformations between superior colliculus visual and motor response fields during head-unrestrained gaze shifts.

Morteza Sadeh1,2,3,4, Amirsaman Sajad1,2,3,4, Hongying Wang1,3,4, Xiaogang Yan1,3,4, John Douglas Crawford1,2,3,4.   

Abstract

We previously reported that visuomotor activity in the superior colliculus (SC)--a key midbrain structure for the generation of rapid eye movements--preferentially encodes target position relative to the eye (Te) during low-latency head-unrestrained gaze shifts (DeSouza et al., 2011). Here, we trained two monkeys to perform head-unrestrained gaze shifts after a variable post-stimulus delay (400-700 ms), to test whether temporally separated SC visual and motor responses show different spatial codes. Target positions, final gaze positions and various frames of reference (eye, head, and space) were dissociated through natural (untrained) trial-to-trial variations in behaviour. 3D eye and head orientations were recorded, and 2D response field data were fitted against multiple models by use of a statistical method reported previously (Keith et al., 2009). Of 60 neurons, 17 showed a visual response, 12 showed a motor response, and 31 showed both visual and motor responses. The combined visual response field population (n = 48) showed a significant preference for Te, which was also preferred in each visual subpopulation. In contrast, the motor response field population (n = 43) showed a preference for final (relative to initial) gaze position models, and the Te model was statistically eliminated in the motor-only population. There was also a significant shift of coding from the visual to motor response within visuomotor neurons. These data confirm that SC response fields are gaze-centred, and show a target-to-gaze transformation between visual and motor responses. Thus, visuomotor transformations can occur between, and even within, neurons within a single frame of reference and brain structure.
© 2015 Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Keywords:  eye movement; gaze control; head movement; monkeys; unit recording; visuomotor transformation

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26448341     DOI: 10.1111/ejn.13093

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Neurosci        ISSN: 0953-816X            Impact factor:   3.386


  15 in total

1.  Disruption of Fixation Reveals Latent Sensorimotor Processes in the Superior Colliculus.

Authors:  Uday K Jagadisan; Neeraj J Gandhi
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2016-06-01       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Dynamic shifts of visual and saccadic signals in prefrontal cortical regions 8Ar and FEF.

Authors:  Sanjeev B Khanna; Jonathan A Scott; Matthew A Smith
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2020-10-07       Impact factor: 2.714

3.  Beyond the labeled line: variation in visual reference frames from intraparietal cortex to frontal eye fields and the superior colliculus.

Authors:  Valeria C Caruso; Daniel S Pages; Marc A Sommer; Jennifer M Groh
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2017-12-20       Impact factor: 2.714

4.  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 5.  Orienting our view of the superior colliculus: specializations and general functions.

Authors:  Kathryne M Allen; Jennifer Lawlor; Angeles Salles; Cynthia F Moss
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2021-11-23       Impact factor: 6.627

6.  Integration of allocentric and egocentric visual information in a convolutional/multilayer perceptron network model of goal-directed gaze shifts.

Authors:  Parisa Abedi Khoozani; Vishal Bharmauria; Adrian Schütz; Richard P Wildes; J Douglas Crawford
Journal:  Cereb Cortex Commun       Date:  2022-07-08

7.  Compensating for a shifting world: evolving reference frames of visual and auditory signals across three multimodal brain areas.

Authors:  Valeria C Caruso; Daniel S Pages; Marc A Sommer; Jennifer M Groh
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2021-04-14       Impact factor: 2.974

8.  Cortical Activation during Landmark-Centered vs. Gaze-Centered Memory of Saccade Targets in the Human: An FMRI Study.

Authors:  Ying Chen; J D Crawford
Journal:  Front Syst Neurosci       Date:  2017-06-23

9.  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

10.  Three-Dimensional Representation of Motor Space in the Mouse Superior Colliculus.

Authors:  Jonathan J Wilson; Nicolas Alexandre; Caterina Trentin; Marco Tripodi
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2018-05-17       Impact factor: 10.834

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