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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 5 May 1999, pp. 2429-2436
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
1Medical Research Council Group in Sensory-Motor Neuroscience, Department of Physiology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6; and 2Department of Psychology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3H 4J1, Canada
Dorris, Michael C.,
Tracy L. Taylor,
Raymond M. Klein, and
Douglas P. Munoz.
Influence of Previous Visual Stimulus or Saccade on Saccadic
Reaction Times in Monkey. J. Neurophysiol. 81: 2429-2436, 1999.
Influence of previous visual stimulus or saccade on saccadic reaction
times in monkey. Saccadic reaction times (SRTs) to suddenly appearing targets are influenced by neural processes that occur before
and after target presentation. The majority of previous studies have
focused on how posttarget factors, such as target attributes or changes
in task complexity, affect SRTs. Studies of pretarget factors have
focused on how prior knowledge of the timing or location of the
impending target, gathered through cueing or probabilistic information,
affects SRTs. Our goal was to investigate additional pretarget factors
to determine whether SRTs can also be influenced by the history of
saccadic and visual activity even when these factors are spatially
unpredictive as to the location of impending saccadic targets. Monkeys
were trained on two paradigms. In the saccade-saccade
paradigm, monkeys were required to follow a saccadic target that
stepped from a central location, to an eccentric location, back to
center, and finally to a second eccentric location. The
stimulus-saccade paradigm was similar, except the central
fixation target remained illuminated during presentation of the first
eccentric stimulus; the monkey was required to maintain central
fixation and to make a saccade to the second eccentric stimulus only on
disappearance of the fixation point. In both paradigms, the first
eccentric stimulus was presented at the same, opposite, or orthogonal
location with respect to the final target location in a given trial. We
measured SRTs to the final target under conditions in which all
parameters were identical except for the location of the first
eccentric stimulus. In the saccade-saccade paradigm, we found that the
SRT to the final target was slowest when it was presented
opposite to the initial saccadic target, whereas in the
stimulus-saccade paradigm the SRT to the final target was slowest when
it was presented at the same location as the initial
stimulus. In both paradigms, these increases in SRTs were greatest
during the shortest intervals between presentation of successive
eccentric stimuli, yet these effects remained present for the longest
intervals employed in this study. SRTs became faster as the direction
and eccentricity of the two successive stimuli became increasingly
misaligned from that which produced the maximal SRT slowing in each
paradigm. The results of the stimulus-saccade paradigm are similar to
the phenomenon of inhibition of return (IOR) in which human subjects
are slower to respond to stimuli that are presented at previously cued
locations. We interpret these findings in terms of overlapping
representations of visuospatial and oculomotor activity in the same
neural structures.
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