Now showing items 1-5 of 5

    • Corollary discharge across the animal kingdom. 

      Crapse, Trinity B; Sommer, Marc A (Nat Rev Neurosci, 2008-08)
      Our movements can hinder our ability to sense the world. Movements can induce sensory input (for example, when you hit something) that is indistinguishable from the input that is caused by external agents (for example, when ...
    • Corollary discharge circuits in the primate brain. 

      Crapse, Trinity B; Sommer, Marc A (Curr Opin Neurobiol, 2008-12)
      Movements are necessary to engage the world, but every movement results in sensorimotor ambiguity. Self-movements cause changes to sensory inflow as well as changes in the positions of objects relative to motor effectors ...
    • Frontal eye field neurons assess visual stability across saccades. 

      Crapse, Trinity B; Sommer, Marc A (J Neurosci, 2012-02-22)
      The image on the retina may move because the eyes move, or because something in the visual scene moves. The brain is not fooled by this ambiguity. Even as we make saccades, we are able to detect whether visual objects remain ...
    • Frontal eye field neurons with spatial representations predicted by their subcortical input. 

      Crapse, Trinity B; Sommer, Marc A (J Neurosci, 2009-04-22)
      The frontal eye field (FEF) is a cortical structure involved in cognitive aspects of eye movement control. Neurons in the FEF, as in most of cerebral cortex, primarily represent contralateral space. They fire for visual ...
    • The frontal eye field as a prediction map. 

      Crapse, Trinity B; Sommer, Marc A (Prog Brain Res, 2008)
      Predictive processes are widespread in the motor and sensory areas of the primate brain. They enable rapid computations despite processing delays and assist in resolving noisy, ambiguous input. Here we propose that the frontal ...