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J Neurophysiol (November 1, 2002). 10.1152/jn.00476.2002
Submitted on 28 June 2002
Accepted on 17 July 2002
REPORT
Department of Neurobiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
Zhou, Hui-Hui,
Min Wei, and
Dora E. Angelaki.
Motor Scaling By Viewing Distance of Early Visual Motion Signals
During Smooth Pursuit. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 2880-2885, 2002. The geometry of gaze stabilization during head
translation requires eye movements to scale proportionally to the
inverse of target distance. Such a scaling has indeed been demonstrated
to exist for the translational vestibuloocular reflex (TVOR), as well
as optic flow-selective translational visuomotor reflexes (e.g.,
ocular following, OFR). The similarities in this scaling by a neural
estimate of target distance for both the TVOR and the OFR have been
interpreted to suggest that the two reflexes share common premotor
processing. Because the neural substrates of OFR are partly shared by
those for the generation of pursuit eye movements, we wanted to know if
the site of gain modulation for TVOR and OFR is also part of a major
pathway for pursuit. Thus, in the present studies, we investigated in
rhesus monkeys whether initial eye velocity and acceleration during the
open-loop portion of step ramp pursuit scales with target distance.
Specifically, with visual motion identical on the retina during
tracking at different distances (12, 24, and 60 cm), we compared the
first 80 ms of horizontal pursuit. We report that initial eye velocity and acceleration exhibits either no or a very small dependence on
vergence angle that is at least an order of magnitude less than the
corresponding dependence of the TVOR and OFR. The results suggest that
the neural substrates for motor scaling by target distance remain
largely distinct from the main pathway for pursuit.
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