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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 5 November 2000, pp. 2340-2355
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Medical Research Council Human Movement and Balance Unit, Institute of Neurology, London WC1N 3BG, United Kingdom
Barnes, G. R.,
D. M. Barnes, and
S. R. Chakraborti.
Ocular Pursuit Responses to Repeated, Single-Cycle Sinusoids
Reveal Behavior Compatible With Predictive Pursuit. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 2340-2355, 2000. The link between
anticipatory smooth eye movements and prediction in sinusoidal pursuit
was investigated by presentation of series of identical, single-cycle,
sinusoidal target motion stimuli. Stimuli occurred at randomized
intervals (1.2-2.8 s) but were preceded by an audio warning cue 480 ms
before each presentation. Cycle period (T) varied from 0.64 to 2.56 s and target displacement from 4 to 20° in separate
series. For T
1.28 s, responses to the first
stimulus of each series exhibited a time delay across the whole cycle
(mean = 121 ms for T = 0.8 s). But, in the
second and subsequent (steady-state) presentations, anticipatory
movements, proportional to target velocity, were made and time delay
was significantly reduced (mean = 43 ms for T = 0.8 s). Steady-state time delays were comparable to those evoked
during continuous sinusoidal pursuit and less than pursuit reaction
time. Even when subjects did not follow the target in the first
presentation, they responded to the second presentation with reduced
time delay. Throughout the experiments, three types of catch trial
(A-C) were introduced. In A, the target failed
to appear as expected after the warning cue. Anticipatory smooth
movements were initiated, reaching a peak velocity proportional to
prior target velocity around 200 ms after expected target onset. In
B, the target stopped midway through the cycle. Even if the
target remained on and was stationary, the eye movement continued to be
driven away from the stationary target with a velocity similar to that
of prior responses, reaching a peak velocity that was again
proportional to expected target velocity after
205 ms. In
C, the amplitude of the single sinusoid was unexpectedly
increased or decreased. When it decreased, eye velocity throughout the
first half-cycle of the response was close to that executed in response
to prior stimuli of higher velocity and did not return to an
appropriate level for 382-549 ms. Conversely, when amplitude
increased, eye velocity remained inappropriately low for the first
half-cycle. Results of A and C indicate that
subjects are able to use velocity information stored from prior
presentations to initiate an oculomotor drive that predominates over
visual feedback for the first half-cycle. Results of B
indicate that the second part of the cycle is also preprogrammed
because it continued despite efforts to suppress it by fixation. The
results suggest that initial retinal velocity error information can be
sampled, stored, and subsequently replayed as a bi-directional
anticipatory pattern of movement that reduces temporal delay and could
account for predictive control during sinusoidal pursuit.
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