| Literature DB >> 29652247 |
Christopher K Hauser1, Dantong Zhu1, Terrence R Stanford1, Emilio Salinas1.
Abstract
In studies of voluntary movement, a most elemental quantity is the reaction time (RT) between the onset of a visual stimulus and a saccade toward it. However, this RT demonstrates extremely high variability which, in spite of extensive research, remains unexplained. It is well established that, when a visual target appears, oculomotor activity gradually builds up until a critical level is reached, at which point a saccade is triggered. Here, based on computational work and single-neuron recordings from monkey frontal eye field (FEF), we show that this rise-to-threshold process starts from a dynamic initial state that already contains other incipient, internally driven motor plans, which compete with the target-driven activity to varying degrees. The ensuing conflict resolution process, which manifests in subtle covariations between baseline activity, build-up rate, and threshold, consists of fundamentally deterministic interactions, and explains the observed RT distributions while invoking only a small amount of intrinsic randomness.Entities:
Keywords: attention; decision making; frontal eye field; monkey; neuroscience; reward; rhesus macaque; saccadic eye movements
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29652247 PMCID: PMC5947991 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.33456
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140