Perisaccadic remapping and rescaling of visual responses in macaque superior colliculus.

Visual neurons have spatial receptive fields that encode the positions of objects relative to the fovea. Because foveate animals execute frequent saccadic eye movements, this position information is constantly changing, even though the visual world is generally stationary. Interestingly, visual rece...

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Main Authors: Jan Churan, Daniel Guitton, Christopher C Pack
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3524080?pdf=render
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author Jan Churan
Daniel Guitton
Christopher C Pack
author_facet Jan Churan
Daniel Guitton
Christopher C Pack
author_sort Jan Churan
collection DOAJ
description Visual neurons have spatial receptive fields that encode the positions of objects relative to the fovea. Because foveate animals execute frequent saccadic eye movements, this position information is constantly changing, even though the visual world is generally stationary. Interestingly, visual receptive fields in many brain regions have been found to exhibit changes in strength, size, or position around the time of each saccade, and these changes have often been suggested to be involved in the maintenance of perceptual stability. Crucial to the circuitry underlying perisaccadic changes in visual receptive fields is the superior colliculus (SC), a brainstem structure responsible for integrating visual and oculomotor signals. In this work we have studied the time-course of receptive field changes in the SC. We find that the distribution of the latencies of SC responses to stimuli placed outside the fixation receptive field is bimodal: The first mode is comprised of early responses that are temporally locked to the onset of the visual probe stimulus and stronger for probes placed closer to the classical receptive field. We suggest that such responses are therefore consistent with a perisaccadic rescaling, or enhancement, of weak visual responses within a fixed spatial receptive field. The second mode is more similar to the remapping that has been reported in the cortex, as responses are time-locked to saccade onset and stronger for stimuli placed in the postsaccadic receptive field location. We suggest that these two temporal phases of spatial updating may represent different sources of input to the SC.
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spelling doaj.art-d2f0004fbd214f758807335135ed137f2022-12-22T00:30:16ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01712e5219510.1371/journal.pone.0052195Perisaccadic remapping and rescaling of visual responses in macaque superior colliculus.Jan ChuranDaniel GuittonChristopher C PackVisual neurons have spatial receptive fields that encode the positions of objects relative to the fovea. Because foveate animals execute frequent saccadic eye movements, this position information is constantly changing, even though the visual world is generally stationary. Interestingly, visual receptive fields in many brain regions have been found to exhibit changes in strength, size, or position around the time of each saccade, and these changes have often been suggested to be involved in the maintenance of perceptual stability. Crucial to the circuitry underlying perisaccadic changes in visual receptive fields is the superior colliculus (SC), a brainstem structure responsible for integrating visual and oculomotor signals. In this work we have studied the time-course of receptive field changes in the SC. We find that the distribution of the latencies of SC responses to stimuli placed outside the fixation receptive field is bimodal: The first mode is comprised of early responses that are temporally locked to the onset of the visual probe stimulus and stronger for probes placed closer to the classical receptive field. We suggest that such responses are therefore consistent with a perisaccadic rescaling, or enhancement, of weak visual responses within a fixed spatial receptive field. The second mode is more similar to the remapping that has been reported in the cortex, as responses are time-locked to saccade onset and stronger for stimuli placed in the postsaccadic receptive field location. We suggest that these two temporal phases of spatial updating may represent different sources of input to the SC.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3524080?pdf=render
spellingShingle Jan Churan
Daniel Guitton
Christopher C Pack
Perisaccadic remapping and rescaling of visual responses in macaque superior colliculus.
PLoS ONE
title Perisaccadic remapping and rescaling of visual responses in macaque superior colliculus.
title_full Perisaccadic remapping and rescaling of visual responses in macaque superior colliculus.
title_fullStr Perisaccadic remapping and rescaling of visual responses in macaque superior colliculus.
title_full_unstemmed Perisaccadic remapping and rescaling of visual responses in macaque superior colliculus.
title_short Perisaccadic remapping and rescaling of visual responses in macaque superior colliculus.
title_sort perisaccadic remapping and rescaling of visual responses in macaque superior colliculus
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3524080?pdf=render
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