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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 3 September 2002, pp. 1220-1233
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Neurology, Medical University of Luebeck, D-23538 Luebeck, Germany
Rambold, H.,
A. Sprenger, and
C. Helmchen.
Effects of Voluntary Blinks on Saccades, Vergence Eye Movements,
and Saccade-Vergence Interactions in Humans. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 1220-1233, 2002. Blinks are known to
change the kinematic properties of horizontal saccades, probably by
influencing the saccadic premotor circuit. The neuronal basis of this
effect could be explained by changes in the activity of omnipause
neurons in the nucleus raphe interpositus or in the saccade-related
burst neurons of the superior colliculus. Omnipause neurons cease
discharge during both saccades and vergence movements. Because eyelid
blinks can influence both sets of neurons, we hypothesized that blinks
would influence the kinematic parameters of saccades in all directions, vergence, and saccade-vergence interactions. To test this hypothesis, we investigated binocular eye and lid movements in five normal healthy
subjects with the magnetic search coil technique. The subjects
performed conjugate horizontal and vertical saccades from gaze straight
ahead to targets at 20° up, down, right, or left while either
attempting not to blink or voluntarily blinking. While following the
same blink instruction, subjects made horizontal vergence eye movements
of 7° and combined saccade-vergence movements with a version
amplitude of 20°. The movements were performed back and forth from
two targets simultaneously presented nearby (38 cm) and more distant
(145 cm). Small vertical saccades accompanied most vergence movements.
These results show that blinks change the kinematics (saccade duration,
peak velocity, peak acceleration, peak deceleration) of not only
horizontal but also of vertical saccades, of horizontal vergence eye
movements, and of combined saccade-vergence eye movements. Peak
velocity, acceleration, and deceleration of eye movements were
decreased on the average by 30%, and their duration increased by 43%
on the average when they were accompanied by blinks. The blink effect
was time dependent with respect to saccade and vergence onset: the
greatest effect occurred 100 ms prior to saccade onset, whereas there
was no effect when the blink started after saccade onset. The effects
of blinks on saccades and vergence, which are tightly coupled to
latency, support the hypothesis that blinks cause profound
spatiotemporal perturbations of the eye movements by interfering with
the normal saccade/vergence premotor circuits. However, the measured
effect may to a certain degree but not exclusively be explained by
mechanical interference.
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