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J Neurophysiol 98: 2022-2037, 2007. First published June 20, 2007; doi:10.1152/jn.00258.2007
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Role of the Primate Superior Colliculus in the Control of Head Movements

Mark M. G. Walton1, Bernard Bechara3 and Neeraj J. Gandhi1,2,3,4

1Departments of Otolaryngology, 2Neuroscience, and 3Bioengineering and 4the Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, University of Pittsburgh, Eye and Ear Institute, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Submitted 7 March 2007; accepted in final form 18 June 2007

One important behavioral role for head movements is to assist in the redirection of gaze. However, primates also frequently make head movements that do not involve changes in the line of sight. Virtually nothing is known about the neural basis of these head-only movements. In the present study, single-unit extracellular activity was recorded from the superior colliculus while monkeys performed behavioral tasks that permit the temporal dissociation of gaze shifts and head movements. We sought to determine whether superior colliculus contains neurons that modulate their activity in association with head movements in the absence of gaze shifts and whether classic gaze-related burst neurons also discharge for head-only movements. For 26% of the neurons in our sample, significant changes in average firing rate could be attributed to head-only movements. Most of these increased their firing rate immediately prior to the onset of a head movement and continued to discharge at elevated frequency until the offset of the movement. Others discharged at a tonic rate when the head was stable and decreased their activity, or paused, during head movements. For many putative head cells, average firing rate was found to be predictive of head displacement. Some neurons exhibited significant changes in activity associated with gaze, eye-only, and head-only movements, although none of the gaze-related burst neurons significantly modulated its activity in association with head-only movements. These results suggest the possibility that the superior colliculus plays a role in the control of head movements independent of gaze shifts.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. Walton, Dept. of Otolaryngology, University of Pittsburgh, Eye and Ear Institute, 203 Lothrop St., Rm. 153, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 (E-mail: waltonmm{at}upmc.edu)




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