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J Neurophysiol 98: 696-709, 2007. First published June 6, 2007; doi:10.1152/jn.00206.2007
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Frames of Reference for Gaze Saccades Evoked During Stimulation of Lateral Intraparietal Cortex

A. G. Constantin1,2,3, H. Wang1,2, J. C. Martinez-Trujillo1,5 and J. D. Crawford1,2,3,4

1Centre for Vision Research, 2Canadian Institute of Health Research Group for Action and Perception, and 3Department of Biology, York University, Toronto, Ontario; 4Departments of Psychology and Kinesiology and Health Sciences, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M3J 1P3; and 5Department of Physiology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Submitted 26 February 2007; accepted in final form 25 May 2007

Previous studies suggest that stimulation of lateral intraparietal cortex (LIP) evokes saccadic eye movements toward eye- or head-fixed goals, whereas most single-unit studies suggest that LIP uses an eye-fixed frame with eye-position modulations. The goal of our study was to determine the reference frame for gaze shifts evoked during LIP stimulation in head-unrestrained monkeys. Two macaques (M1 and M2) were implanted with recording chambers over the right intraparietal sulcus and with search coils for recording three-dimensional eye and head movements. The LIP region was microstimulated using pulse trains of 300 Hz, 100–150 µA, and 200 ms. Eighty-five putative LIP sites in M1 and 194 putative sites in M2 were used in our quantitative analysis throughout this study. Average amplitude of the stimulation-evoked gaze shifts was 8.67° for M1 and 7.97° for M2 with very small head movements. When these gaze-shift trajectories were rotated into three coordinate frames (eye, head, and body), gaze endpoint distribution for all sites was most convergent to a common point when plotted in eye coordinates. Across all sites, the eye-centered model provided a significantly better fit compared with the head, body, or fixed-vector models (where the latter model signifies no modulation of the gaze trajectory as a function of initial gaze position). Moreover, the probability of evoking a gaze shift from any one particular position was modulated by the current gaze direction (independent of saccade direction). These results provide causal evidence that the motor commands from LIP encode gaze command in eye-fixed coordinates but are also subtly modulated by initial gaze position.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: J. D. Crawford, Center for Vision Research, York University, 4700 Keele St., Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3, Canada (E-mail: jdc{at}yorku.ca)







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