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J Neurophysiol 100: 2907-2918, 2008. First published September 3, 2008; doi:10.1152/jn.90535.2008
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The Initial Disparity Vergence Elicited With Single and Dual Grating Stimuli in Monkeys: Evidence for Disparity Energy Sensing and Nonlinear Interactions

K. Miura1, Y. Sugita1,2, K. Matsuura1, N. Inaba1, K. Kawano1,2 and F. A. Miles3

1Department of Integrative Brain Science, Graduate School of Medicine and 2Nano-Medicine Merger Education Unit, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan; and 3Laboratory of Sensorimotor Research, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland

Submitted 7 May 2008; accepted in final form 27 August 2008

We recorded the initial vertical vergence eye movements elicited in monkeys at short latency (~70 ms) when the two eyes see one-dimensional (1D) horizontal grating patterns that are identical except for a phase difference (disparity) of one-quarter wavelength. With gratings composed of single sine waves, responses were always compensatory, showing Gaussian dependence on log spatial frequency (on average: peak = 0.75 cycles/deg; SD = 0.74; r2 = 0.980) and monotonic dependence on log contrast with a gradual saturation well described by the Naka-Rushton equation (on average: n = 0.89; C50 = 4.1%; r2 = 0.978). With gratings composed of two sine waves whose spatial frequencies were in the ratio 3:5 and whose disparities were of opposite sign (the 3f5f stimulus), responses were determined by the disparities and contrasts of the two sine-wave components rather than the disparity of the features, consistent with early spatial filtering of the monocular inputs before their binocular combination and mediation by detectors sensitive to disparity energy. In addition, responses to the 3f5f stimulus showed a nonlinear dependence on the relative contrasts of the two sine waves. Thus on average, when the contrast of one sine wave was 2.3 times greater than that of the other, the one with the lower contrast was largely ineffective as though suppressed, and responses were determined almost entirely by the sine wave of higher contrast: Winner-Take-All. These findings are very similar to those published previously on the vertical vergence responses of humans, indicating that the monkey provides a good animal model for studying these disparity vergence responses.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: K. Miura, Dept. of Integrative Brain Science, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto Univ., Konoe-cho, Yoshida, Kyoto-shi, Kyoto 606-8501, Japan (E-mail: kmiura{at}brain.med.kyoto-u.ac.jp)







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