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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 4 October 2000, pp. 1835-1850
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208; 2Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520; and 3Department of Physiology and Neuroscience Institute, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois 60611
Suh, M.,
H.-C. Leung, and
R. E. Kettner.
Cerebellar Flocculus and Ventral Paraflocculus Purkinje Cell
Activity During Predictive and Visually Driven Pursuit in Monkey. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 1835-1850, 2000. Purkinje cells in the flocculus and ventral paraflocculus were
studied in tasks designed to distinguish predictive versus visually
guided mechanisms of smooth pursuit. A sum-of-sines task allowed
studies of complex predictive pursuit. A perturbation task examined
visually driven pursuit during unpredictable right-angle changes in
target direction. A gap task examined pursuit that was maintained when
the target was turned off. Neural activity patterns were quantified
using multi-linear models with sensitivities to the position, velocity,
and acceleration of both motor output (eye motion) and visual input
(retinal slip). During the sum-of-sines task, neural responses led eye
motion by an average of 12 ms, a value larger than the 9-ms
transmission delay between flocculus stimulation and eye motion. This
suggests that flocculus/paraflocculus neurons drove pursuit along
predictable sum-of-sines trajectories. In contrast, neural responses
led eye motion by an average of only 2 ms during the perturbation task
and by 6 ms during the gap task. These values suggest a follow-up role
during tasks more heavily dependent on visual processing. Activity in
all three tasks was explained primarily by sensitivities to eye
position and velocity. Eye acceleration played a minor role during
ongoing pursuit, although its influence on firing rate increased during the high accelerations following unexpected changes in target motion.
Retinal slip had a relatively small influence on responses during
pursuit. This was particularly true for the sum-of-sines and gap tasks
where predictive control eliminated any consistent retinal-slip signals
that might have been used to drive the eye. Surprisingly, the influence
of retinal slip did not increase appreciably during unpredictable
perturbations in target direction that generated large amounts of
retinal slip. Thus although visual control signals are needed in
varying amounts during the three pursuit tasks, they have been
converted to motor control signals by the time they leave the
flocculus/paraflocculus system. Individual neurons showed a remarkable
constancy in eye-sensitivity direction across tasks that indicated
direct links to oculomotor neurons. However, some neurons showed
changes in sensitivity magnitude that suggested changes in control
strategy for different tasks. Magnitude differences were largest for
the perturbation task. We conclude that the flocculus/paraflocculus system plays a major role in driving predictive pursuit. It also processes visually driven control signals that originate in other brain
regions after a slight delay.
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