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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 4 April 2001, pp. 1395-1411
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Laboratory of Systems Neuroscience, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-4401
Lebedev, Mikhail A.,
Diana K. Douglass,
Sohie Lee Moody, and
Steven P. Wise.
Prefrontal Cortex Neurons Reflecting Reports of a Visual Illusion. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 1395-1411, 2001. When a small, focally attended visual stimulus and a larger
background frame shift location at the same time, the frame's new
location can affect spatial perception. For horizontal displacements on
the order of 1-2°, when the frame moves more than the attended stimulus, human subjects may perceive that the attended stimulus has
shifted to the right or left when it has not done so. However, that
misapprehension does not disable accurate eye movements to the same
stimulus. We trained a rhesus monkey to report the direction that an
attended stimulus had shifted by making an eye movement to one of the
two report targets. Then, using conditions that induce displacement
illusions in human subjects, we tested the hypothesis that neuronal
activity in the prefrontal cortex (PF) would reflect the displacement
directions reported by the monkey, even when they conflicted with the
actual displacement, if any, of the attended stimulus. We also
predicted that these cells would have directional selectivity for
movements used to make those reports, but not for similar eye movements
made to fixate the attended stimulus. A population of PF neurons showed
the predicted properties, which could not be accounted for on the basis
of either eye-movement or frame-shift parameters. This activity, termed report-related, began approximately 150 ms before the onset of the
reporting saccade. Another population of PF neurons showed greater
directional selectivity for saccadic eye movements made to fixate the
attended stimulus than for similar saccades made to report its
displacement. In view of the evidence that PF functions to integrate
inputs and actions occurring at different times and places, the present
findings support the idea that such integration involves movements to
acquire response targets, directly, as well as actions guided by less
direct response rules, such as perceptual reports.
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