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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 2 August 2001, pp. 676-691
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Laboratory of Sensorimotor Research, National Eye Institute, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Edelman, Jay A. and
Michael E. Goldberg.
Dependence of Saccade-Related Activity in the Primate Superior
Colliculus on Visual Target Presence. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 676-691, 2001. Neurons
in the intermediate layers of the superior colliculus
respond to visual targets and/or discharge immediately before and
during saccades. These visual and motor responses have generally been
considered independent, with the visual response dependent on the
nature of the stimulus, and the saccade-related activity related to the
attributes of the saccade, but not to how the saccade was elicited. In
these experiments we asked whether saccade-related discharge in the
superior colliculus depended on whether the saccade was directed to a
visual target. We recorded extracellular activity of neurons in the
intermediate layers of the superior colliculus of three rhesus monkeys
during saccades in tasks in which we varied the presence or absence of
a visual target and the temporal delays between the appearance and
disappearance of a target and saccade initiation. Across our sample of
neurons (n = 64), discharge was highest when a saccade
was made to a still-present visual target, regardless of whether the
target had recently appeared or had been present for several hundred
milliseconds. Discharge was intermediate when the target had recently
disappeared and lowest when the target had never appeared during that
trial. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that
saccade-related discharge decreases as the time between the target
disappearance and saccade initiation increases. Saccade velocity was
also higher for saccades to visual targets, and correlated on a
trial-by-trial basis with perisaccadic discharge for many neurons.
However, discharge of many neurons was dependent on task but
independent of saccade velocity, and across our sample of neurons,
saccade velocity was higher for saccades made immediately after target
appearance than would be predicted by discharge level. A tighter
relationship was found between saccade precision and perisaccadic
discharge. These findings suggest that just as the purpose of the
saccadic system in primates is to drive the fovea to a visual target,
presaccadic motor activity in the superior colliculus is most intense
when such a target is actually present. This enhanced activity
may, itself, contribute to the enhanced performance of the saccade
system when the saccade is made to a real visual target.
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