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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 1 July 2002, pp. 306-322
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Biophysics, University of Nijmegen, 6500 HB Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Van Beuzekom, A. D. and
J.A.M. Van Gisbergen.
Interaction Between Visual and Vestibular Signals for the Control
of Rapid Eye Movements. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 306-322, 2002. To investigate interactions between
voluntary and reflexive eye movements, five subjects were asked to make
pro- or anti-saccades to various oblique locations cued by a head-fixed
flash while being rotated sinusoidally in yaw (0.17 Hz; 73°/s peak
velocity) in complete darkness. Eye movements were recorded with the
coil technique. In the pro-saccade task, targeting responses showed clear compensation for the intervening nystagmus, but there was a
marked increase in horizontal scatter. Most quick phases directed into
the hemifield opposite to the flash (away trials) were suppressed from
~100 ms onward. By contrast, quick phases directed into the hemifield
of the flash (toward trials) continued virtually unabated until
visually triggered saccades began to appear. From 80 ms onward, these
vestibularly triggered movements showed signs of metrical modification
by the visual signal. In the anti-saccade experiments, suppression of
quick phases away from the flash was just as strong as in the
pro-saccade experiments, and error rates in these trials were almost as
low as in stationary control conditions. Suppression of quick phases
directed toward the flash was a new phenomenon that emerged only in
anti-saccade experiments. Since this inhibition had a late onset and
was only partial, error rates in anti-saccade toward trials were very
high. At short latencies, both components of most rapid eye movements
were wrongly directed toward the flash. This was followed by a stage
with frequent incongruent responses in which unsuppressed quick phases
provoked an incorrect horizontal movement, whereas the vertical
component showed a correct anti-saccade response. At still longer
latencies, most responses were correct in both components. The visual
modification of short-latency responses in both tasks showed that rapid
eye movements could not simply be classified as either voluntary or
reflexive, but suggested that signals underlying each class could merge
into a compromise response. That vestibular rotation during the
anti-saccade task may cause a wrongly directed horizontal component
resembling a quick phase, combined with a vertical component expressing
a correct anti-saccade signal, reveals a remarkable independence at the
component level. These observations suggest that voluntary and
involuntary movements can be programmed in parallel. This behavior is
explained most parsimoniously by assuming that the two signals converge
at a component-coding stage of the system, rather than at a vectorial
coding stage.
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