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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 4 October 2002, pp. 1815-1829
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Division of Biology, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena; 2Sloan-Swartz Center for Theoretical Neurobiology, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125; and 3Sloan-Swartz Center for Theoretical Neurobiology, Salk Institute, La Jolla, California 92037
Sabes, Philip N.,
Boris Breznen, and
Richard
A. Andersen.
Parietal Representation of Object-Based Saccades. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 1815-1829, 2002. When monkeys
make saccadic eye movements to simple visual targets, neurons in the
lateral intraparietal area (LIP) display a retinotopic, or
eye-centered, coding of the target location. However natural saccadic
eye movements are often directed at objects or parts of objects in the
visual scene. In this paper we investigate whether LIP represents
saccadic eye movements differently when the target is specified as part
of a visually displayed object. Monkeys were trained to perform an
object-based saccade task that required them to make saccades to
previously cued parts of an abstract object after the object reappeared
in a new orientation. We recorded single neurons in area LIP of two
macaque monkeys and analyzed their activity in the object-based saccade
task, as well as two control tasks: a standard memory saccade task and a fixation task with passive object viewing. The majority of LIP neurons that were tuned in the memory saccade task were also tuned in
the object-based saccade task. Using a hierarchical generalized linear
model analysis, we compared the effects of three different spatial
variables on the firing rate: the retinotopic location of the target,
the object-fixed location of the target, and the orientation of the
object in space. There was no evidence of an explicit object-fixed
representation in the activity in LIP during either of the object-based
tasks. In other words, no cells had receptive fields that rotated with
the object. While some cells showed a modulation of activity due to the
location of the target on the object, these variations were small
compared to the retinotopic effects. For most cells, firing rates were
best accounted for by either the retinotopic direction of the movement,
the orientation of the object, or both spatial variables. The preferred
direction of these retinotopic and object orientation effects were
found to be invariant across tasks. On average, the object orientation effects were consistent with the retinotopic coding of potential target
locations on the object. This interpretation is supported by the fact
that the magnitude of these two effects were roughly equal in the early
portions of the trial, but around the time of the motor response, the
retinotopic effects dominated. We conclude that LIP uses the same
retinotopic coding of saccade target whether the target is specified as
an absolute point in space or as a location on a moving object.
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