Frontal eye field neurons assess visual stability across saccades.

dc.contributor.author

Crapse, Trinity B

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Sommer, Marc A

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United States

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2015-07-15T02:41:17Z

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2012-02-22

dc.description.abstract

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 stable or move. Here we test whether this ability to assess visual stability across saccades is present at the single-neuron level in the frontal eye field (FEF), an area that receives both visual input and information about imminent saccades. Our hypothesis was that neurons in the FEF report whether a visual stimulus remains stable or moves as a saccade is made. Monkeys made saccades in the presence of a visual stimulus outside of the receptive field. In some trials, the stimulus remained stable, but in other trials, it moved during the saccade. In every trial, the stimulus occupied the center of the receptive field after the saccade, thus evoking a reafferent visual response. We found that many FEF neurons signaled, in the strength and timing of their reafferent response, whether the stimulus had remained stable or moved. Reafferent responses were tuned for the amount of stimulus translation, and, in accordance with human psychophysics, tuning was better (more prevalent, stronger, and quicker) for stimuli that moved perpendicular, rather than parallel, to the saccade. Tuning was sometimes present as well for nonspatial transaccadic changes (in color, size, or both). Our results indicate that FEF neurons evaluate visual stability during saccades and may be general purpose detectors of transaccadic visual change.

dc.identifier

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22357866

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32/8/2835

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1529-2401

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/10299

dc.language

eng

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Society for Neuroscience

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J Neurosci

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10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1320-11.2012

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Action Potentials

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Analysis of Variance

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Animals

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Brain Mapping

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Female

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Fixation, Ocular

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Frontal Lobe

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Macaca mulatta

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Male

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Orientation

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Photic Stimulation

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Psychophysics

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Reaction Time

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Saccades

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Sensory Receptor Cells

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Visual Fields

dc.title

Frontal eye field neurons assess visual stability across saccades.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Sommer, Marc A|0000-0001-5061-763X

pubs.author-url

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22357866

pubs.begin-page

2835

pubs.end-page

2845

pubs.issue

8

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Basic Science Departments

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Biomedical Engineering

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Center for Cognitive Neuroscience

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Duke

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Duke Institute for Brain Sciences

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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Neurobiology

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Pratt School of Engineering

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School of Medicine

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University Institutes and Centers

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

32

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