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Laboratory of Sensorimotor Research, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-4435
Submitted 27 November 2002; accepted in final form 3 April 2003
One difficulty with measuring receptive fields in the awake monkey is that
even well-trained animals make small eye movements during fixation. These
complicate the measurement of receptive fields by blurring out the region
where a response is observed, causing underestimates of the ability of
individual neurons to signal changes in stimulus position. In simple cells,
this blurring may severely disrupt estimates of receptive field structure. An
accurate measurement of eye movements would allow correction of this blurring.
Scleral search coils have been used to provide such measurements, although
little is known about their accuracy. We have devised a range of approaches to
address this issue: implanting two coils into a single eye, exploiting the
small size of V1 receptive fields and developing maximum-likelihood fitting
techniques to extract receptive field parameters in the presence of eye
movements. All our investigations lead to the same conclusion: our scleral
search coils (which were not sutured to the globe) are subject to an error of
approximately the same magnitude as the small eye movements which occur during
fixation: SD
0.1°. This error is large enough to explain the SD of
measured vergence in the absence of any real changes in vergence state. This,
and a variety of other arguments, indicate that the real variation in vergence
is much smaller than coil measurements suggest. These results suggest that
monkeys, like humans, maintain very stable vergence. The error has a slower
time course than fixational eye movements so that search coils report the
difference in eye position between two consecutive trials more accurately than
the eye position itself on either trial. Receptive field estimates are
unlikely to be improved by assuming the coil record is veridical and
correcting for eye position accordingly. However, receptive field parameters
can reliably be determined by a fitting technique that allows for eye
movements. It is possible that suturing coils to the globe reduces the
artifacts, but no method has been available to demonstrate this. These
receptive field measurements provide a general means by which the reliability
of eye-position measurements can be assessed.
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