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J Neurophysiol 90: 2770-2776, 2003; doi:10.1152/jn.00330.2003
0022-3077/03 $5.00
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Contribution of Head Movement to Gaze Command Coding in Monkey Frontal Cortex and Superior Colliculus

Julio C. Martinez-Trujillo, Eliana M. Klier, Hongying Wang and J. Douglas Crawford

Centre for Vision Research and, Departments of Psychology, Biology and Kinesiology and Health Sciences, York University, Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3, Canada

Submitted 4 April 2003; accepted in final form 17 June 2003

Most of what we know about the neural control of gaze comes from experiments in head-fixed animals, but several "head-free" studies have suggested that fixing the head dramatically alters the apparent gaze command. We directly investigated this issue by quantitatively comparing head-fixed and head-free gaze trajectories evoked by electrically stimulating 52 sites in the superior colliculus (SC) of two monkeys and 23 sites in the supplementary eye fields (SEF) of two other monkeys. We found that head movements made a significant contribution to gaze shifts evoked from both neural structures. In the majority of the stimulated sites, average gaze amplitude was significantly larger and individual gaze trajectories were significantly less convergent in space with the head free to move. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that head-fixed stimulation only reveals the oculomotor component of the gaze shift, not the true, planned goal of the movement. One implication of this finding is that when comparing stimulation data against popular gaze control models, freeing the head shifts the apparent coding of gaze away from a "spatial code" toward a simpler visual model in the SC and toward an eye-centered or fixed-vector model representation in the SEF.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: J. C. Martinez-Trujillo, Centre for Vision Research, York Univ., 4700 Keele St., Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3, Canada (E-mail: trujillo{at}yorku.ca).




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