|
|
||||||||
J Neurophysiol (March 1, 2003). 10.1152/jn.00675.2002
Submitted on Submitted 14 August 2002; accepted in final form 15 November 2002
1Centre for Systems Engineering and Applied Mechanics, Université Catholique de Louvain, 1348 Louvain-la-Neuve; and 2Laboratory of Neurophysiology, Université Catholique de Louvain, 1200 Brussels, Belgium
| |
ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Blohm, Gunnar,
Marcus Missal, and
Philippe Lefèvre.
Interaction Between Smooth Anticipation and Saccades During
Ocular Orientation in Darkness.
J. Neurophysiol. 89: 1423-1433, 2003.
A saccade triggered during sustained
smooth pursuit is programmed using retinal information about the
relative position and velocity of the target with respect to the eye.
Thus the smooth pursuit and saccadic systems are coordinated by using
common retinal inputs. Yet, in the absence of retinal information about
the relative motion of the eye with respect to the target, the question
arises whether the smooth and saccadic systems are still able to be
coordinated possibly by using extraretinal information to account for
the saccadic and smooth eye movements. To address this question, we flashed a target during smooth anticipatory eye movements in darkness, and the subjects were asked to orient their visual axis to the remembered location of the flash. We observed multiple orientation saccades (typically 2-3) toward the memorized location of the flash.
The first orienting saccade was programmed using only the position
error at the moment of the flash, and the smooth eye movement was
ignored. However, subsequent saccades executed in darkness compensated
gradually for the smooth eye displacement (mean compensation
70%).
This behavior revealed a 400-ms delay in the time course of orientation
for the compensation of the ongoing smooth eye displacement. We
conclude that extraretinal information about the smooth motor command
is available to the saccadic system in the absence of visual input.
There is a 400-ms delay for smooth movement integration, saccade
programming and execution.
| |
INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Saccades and smooth pursuit eye
movements are used in combination during orientation of the visual axis
toward a moving target. It was previously thought that these different
eye movements were controlled by independent neural systems, although
they act in synergy to reach a moving target. This view has recently
been challenged at the neuronal level (Krauzlis and Miles
1998
; Missal and Heinen 2001
; Missal and
Keller 2002
; Missal et al. 2000
). At the
behavioral level, the coordination between saccades and smooth pursuit
has so far been studied during orientation toward a moving visual
target (de Brouwer et al. 2001
, 2002
). In this condition, it has been shown that saccadic and smooth pursuit motor
commands sum up. Furthermore, the saccadic and smooth pursuit systems
could share a common source of information, i.e., the slip of the
target image on the retina. This sharing of visual information allows
the saccadic system to compensate for the motion of the target during
the latency period and the execution of catch-up saccades. Thus to
accurately orient the eyes toward a visual target, the saccadic and
smooth pursuit systems interact, and movements are programmed using
retinal information. Yet, this is only true if there is continuous
visual feedback. In the absence of visual input, the question arises
whether different movements could still be coordinated. In such a
situation, the oculomotor system has to integrate extraretinal signals
to account for self-motion.
The role of extraretinal signals in the saccadic system has been
addressed in numerous studies by means of the double-step and the
colliding saccades paradigms (Aslin and Shea 1987
;
Becker and Jürgens 1979
; Dassonville et al.
1992
; Dominey et al. 1997
; Goossens and
Van Opstal 1997
; Hallett and Lightstone 1976a
,b
; Mays and Sparks 1980
; Mushiake et al.
1999
; Schlag and Schlag-Rey 1990
; Schlag
et al. 1989
, 1990
; Schlag-Rey et al. 1989
;
Tian et al. 2000
). In these studies, saccades toward the
memorized position of flashed targets were investigated. If before a
saccade the eyes were deviated by another saccade evoked either
visually or by microstimulation, the second saccade accurately reached
its goal. The system had to use some information about the first eye movement to adjust the second saccade because the initial retinotopic vector of the second saccade was not accurate anymore. These authors concluded that the saccadic system has access to extraretinal signals,
i.e., the efference copy of the saccadic motor command, that update the
internal representation of the target in space. Thus in the absence of
retinal input, the saccadic system makes an extensive use of
extraretinal signals.
However, the double-step and colliding saccades paradigms investigate only one aspect of the self-movement integration, i.e., whether the oculomotor system keeps track of consecutive saccades by using extraretinal signals. What would happen if prior to a saccade the eyes were displaced by a smooth eye movement instead of a saccade? Would the system have access to extraretinal information about self-movement to accurately orient the eyes? If this was the case, could the system adjust the saccadic goal or would there be an a posteriori mechanism that accounted for the smooth perturbation? Both scenarios would need a source of extraretinal information to compensate for the smooth eye displacement. Here, we address the question whether the saccadic system receives such extraretinal information from the pursuit system to account for smooth eye movements in darkness.
To investigate this topic, we used a paradigm that could generate
smooth eye movements without bringing into play any retinal slip
information. This allowed us to rule out the hypothesis that a
memorized retinal slip signal could play a role. Furthermore, our
protocol provided a saccadic goal using as little retinal information
as possible. We achieved this objective by using anticipatory smooth
pursuit and memory-guided saccades. Indeed, orientation of the visual
axis in the absence of retinal stimulation is possible in both smooth
and saccadic systems. Saccades can be aimed toward the memorized
position of a previously flashed target (Goldman-Rakic 1987
). Anticipatory smooth eye movements can be evoked in the absence of a moving target if there is a previous "build-up" of the
expectation of future target motion (Barnes and Asselman
1991
; Kao and Morrow 1994
; Kowler et al.
1984
). Thus we reduced the visual information available to the
oculomotor system to a minimum. This disabled the ability of the
saccadic system to rely on retinal information about motion to program
saccades. In that way, we created an original paradigm that allowed us
to investigate the hypothesis of a mechanism that could compensate for
the smooth eye movements by means of corrective saccades based on
extraretinal signals.
| |
METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Experimental set-up
Human subjects sat in darkness in front of a 1-m distant tangent
screen, which spanned about ±45° of their visual field. Their head
was restrained by a chin-rest. A 0.2° red LASER target spot was
back-projected onto the screen and moved horizontally under the control
of a mirror-galvanometer. Movements of one eye were recorded with the
scleral coil technique, Skalar Medical BV (Collewijn et al.
1975
; Robinson 1963
). Healthy subjects without
any known oculomotor abnormalities were recruited after informed
consent. Among the seven subjects, three were completely naïve
of oculomotor experiments. Mean age was 29, ranging from 22 to 36. All
procedures were conducted with approval of the Université
Catholique de Louvain Ethics committee.
Paradigm
Recording sessions were composed of a series of blocks of 40 trials. Each session was divided into three parts: first, each subject had to perform one block of control trials toward stationary targets, then a block of build-up trials was presented to build up a smooth anticipatory response, and the last (but longest) part of the sessions was composed of several blocks of test trials mixed with build-up trials.
Control trials were composed of two types of randomly presented stimuli (transient and sustained; Fig. 1A). All control trials began with a fixation period of 800 ms in the center of the screen. After the target disappeared for a variable duration of 100-500 ms (gap), either a 10-ms flash (transient control condition) or a 1,000-ms target (sustained control condition) was presented at random locations in a range ±15° around the central fixation point. All control trials lasted for 2,300 ms. Subjects were instructed to orient their eyes toward the target (sustained control condition) or toward the remembered position of the flash (transient control condition).
|
To build up a smooth anticipatory response, we used build-up trials
(Fig. 1B). After a fixation period of 800 ms in the center of the screen, the target disappeared for 300 ms. The gap duration was
chosen to give a maximal smooth anticipatory response (Morrow and Lamb 1996
). At reappearance, the target moved for 800 ms
from the center of the screen at 40°/s always in the same direction. The trial ended with a 500-ms fixation period. Subjects were instructed to follow the target as accurately as possible.
For the third part of the recording session, build-up trials were randomly interleaved with 30% of test trials: transient and sustained test trials (Fig. 1A). Both test conditions began like the build-up trials with an 800-ms fixation at the center of the screen followed by a gap that varied randomly in duration from 100 to 500 ms. After the gap, either a 10-ms flash (transient test condition) or a 1,000-ms target (sustained test condition) was presented at a random position in a range ±15° around the expected target position (= target position of build-up trial). All trials lasted for 2,300 ms. Subjects were instructed to follow the target as accurately as possible and to fixate the memorized target position in case of a transient test trial.
Data acquisition and analysis
Eye and target position were sampled at 500 Hz and stored on the hard disc of a PC for off-line analysis. MATLAB (Mathworks) was used to implement digital filtering, velocity and acceleration estimation algorithms. Position signals were low-pass filtered by a zero-phase digital filter (autoregressive forward-backward filter, cutoff frequency: 50 Hz). Velocity and acceleration were derived from position signals using a central difference algorithm.
In our analysis, only control and test trials were analyzed. We were
interested in saccades directed toward the flashed or sustained target.
Saccades were detected using an acceleration threshold of
750°/s2, and their latency was measured with
respect to the target onset. We analyzed the first saccade for all
stimulus conditions. Up to five orienting saccades were taken into
account in the transient condition. Saccades were removed from the eye
velocity trace to obtain the smooth velocity. Therefore we measured the
smooth eye velocity before and after the saccade and interpolated
linearly between the values to obtain an estimation of the smooth eye
velocity during the saccades. This allowed us to quantify the
contribution of the smooth pursuit system
PAmp to the total saccadic amplitude SAmp. We also measured different
parameters that may play a role in saccadic programming. Position error
(PE) and retinal slip (RS) signals were sampled at the moment of the
target onset (to) and 100 ms before the saccade. For more details about
the estimation of those parameters, see METHODS section of
de Brouwer et al. (2002)
. Furthermore, the smooth eye
velocity signal was integrated to obtain the smooth eye displacement
SED. In the transient test condition, the orientation process continued
after the first saccade, and the time course of this process was
investigated. The final orientation was defined as the eye position
after the last saccade before return to the central fixation point.
| |
RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Three examples of the different stimulus conditions are
illustrated in Fig. 2. For build-up
trials (Fig. 2A), the eye movement could be entirely smooth
although most of the time anticipatory and/or visually guided saccades
were present. In the test trials (Fig. 2, B and
C), subjects anticipated as in the build-up trials. Sustained test trails (Fig. 2B) typically presented one or
two saccades toward the target, whereas for transient test trials (Fig.
2C) subjects typically needed two or three orienting
saccades. Subjects reported that they perceived the 10-ms flash as
being stationary. This is in accordance with the findings of
Gellman and Fletcher (1992)
. However, sustained test
targets were perceived to be in movement, which is due to the retinal
slip caused by the smooth anticipatory eye movement. The last saccade
toward the visual or remembered target always occurred when smooth eye velocity was close to 0°/s.
|
Figure 3 shows the pattern of smooth eye
movements for transient test trials. The pattern was very similar for
sustained test trials. After the gap onset (Fig. 3, time 0),
smooth anticipation built up. The mean smooth anticipatory eye velocity
at the moment of the target reappearance (sustained or transient) was
9.3 ± 6.3°/s (n = 4,238) ranging from 0 to
34°/s. The amplitude of the smooth anticipatory movement varied from
trial to trial and depended on the trials history across the
experimental session (build-up or test trials). This influence of the
history of previous trials has first been described by Kowler et
al. (1984)
.
|
General saccadic properties
In this section, we describe the characteristics of the first saccade toward the test target for both the sustained and the transient test conditions. All results were tested and are valid separately for each condition but will be presented together for the sake of clarity. We first analyzed the main sequence relationship as well as the saccadic latency histogram.
During sustained smooth pursuit, the motor commands of the saccadic and
smooth pursuit system sum up (de Brouwer et al. 2002
). As the smooth pursuit system is active during the saccadic command execution, the total saccadic amplitude
SAmp = S*Amp + PAmp, where
S*Amp is the component from
the saccadic system and PAmp is the contribution of the pursuit system. This is reflected in the saccadic main sequence relationship, where control saccades and those during sustained pursuit (opposite or in the same direction as the saccadic command) fall into three different populations. After correction for
the participation of the smooth pursuit system, all three populations
merge into one. Here, we performed this analysis for saccades triggered
during smooth anticipatory eye movements. Both main sequence
relationships
saccade duration versus saccade amplitude and saccade
peak velocity versus saccade amplitude
were analyzed. Correlations for
both main sequence relationships were significantly better
(t-test, P < 0.05) after correction for the
smooth anticipation component than before correction (total
n = 4,985). Figure 4
illustrates this result for the main sequence relationship between
saccade duration and amplitude for subject 7. Only for one
subject (subject 5) did the second main sequence
relationship not show a significant improvement after correction for
the smooth component. Taking it all together, we showed here that like
smooth pursuit, smooth anticipation adds up to the saccadic motor
command. Therefore when analyzing saccade programming, we first removed
the pursuit component (PAmp) from the
saccade (SAmp). All subsequent
analyses were thus performed on the corrected saccade amplitude
S*Amp.
|
For the first orientation saccade after target reappearance, we
evaluated whether the information used for its programming was based on
the sensory signal of the target or whether it was an anticipatory
saccade directed toward the expected moving target. Figure
5A shows an example of such an
anticipatory saccade (latency: 37 ms). This analysis was done to
quantify the minimum saccade latency we could consider for the analysis
of saccades during test trials. If the saccade endpoint fell into a
±5° interval around the target position, the saccade was considered
to be visually driven. Otherwise, if the saccade endpoint fell into
another ±5° interval around the expected build-up ramp, the saccade
was classified as anticipatory. If the saccade endpoint fell into both
intervals, the trial was not classified (6.5% of trials). The
histogram of the classified saccadic latencies pooled for all subjects
is shown in Fig. 5B;
represents anticipatory saccades
(n = 406), whereas
corresponds to visually guided
saccades (n = 3,832). Saccades that fell into
for
latencies >300 ms came exclusively from the transient test condition.
To describe the latency histogram with an analytical function, we first
tried a normal distribution. However, the Jarque-Bera test for goodness
of fit to a normal distribution rejects the hypothesis that the
saccadic latencies follow a normal distribution (P < 0.001). Thus we described the latency histogram with a recinormal
function (Reddi and Carpenter 2000
). This function
fitted well the data (see - - - in Fig. 5B; R = 0.972, P < 0.001), which means
that it is the reciprocal of latency that follows a normal
distribution. The maximum of the fitted recinormal distribution lies at
114 ms. The onset of visually guided saccades in the histogram reveals
saccadic latencies as short as 80 ms. No significant difference was
found between the sustained and the transient test conditions. The
maximum of the fitted distribution varied from 88 to 132 ms across
subjects.
|
Programming of the first saccade
We were interested in how the saccadic system programs the first
orienting saccade after the target reappearance for both the sustained
and transient test conditions. In the previous section, we showed that
the smooth anticipatory command adds linearly to the motor command of
the saccadic system. Thus to analyze the saccade programming, we
subtracted the smooth anticipatory eye displacement during the saccade
PAmp from the measured saccade amplitude SAmp to obtain the purely
saccadic component S*Amp. In
this analysis, we included saccades with latency >125 ms (de
Brouwer et al. 2002
). Table 1
summarizes the principal parameters that characterize the sustained and
transient test trials. The saccadic gain was defined as the ratio
between the measured saccade amplitude
SAmp and the ideal saccade
(SAmp+ PEafter 1st
saccade). For the transient test trials, Table 1 gives also
an indication about the final error PEend and the
total smooth eye displacement SEDtotal at the end
of the orientation process.
|
In the case of the sustained test condition, the question is whether
the retinal slip is evaluated to program the saccade, as is the case
during sustained pursuit (de Brouwer et al. 2002
). Indeed, de Brouwer et al. (2002)
showed that saccades
triggered during sustained pursuit are programmed using an estimate of
the position error and the retinal slip measured 100 ms before saccade onset. They hypothesized that 100 ms before saccade onset is the last
moment for visual information to be taken into account in saccadic
amplitude programming (Becker and Jürgens 1979
;
Heywood and Churcher 1981
). To test the hypothesis that
the system behaves in the same way for anticipatory and visually guided
smooth pursuit, we performed a multiple regression analysis for the
dependent variable S*Amp using
the independent variables PE
100 and
RS
100. The index -100 indicates that we
measured these parameters 100 ms before saccade onset. Table
2 shows the results of the analysis for
the sustained test condition. The best correlation was obtained with PE
100 and RS
100 as
independent variables (Eq. 1)
|
(1) |
100 and
RS
100 was always significant, except for one
subject (subject 5: P > 0.05 for
coefficient of RS
100). Across subjects,
regression coefficients varied for PE
100
between 0.885 and 0.984 and for RS
100 between
0.035 and 0.086. As a result, we showed here that the same strategy is
used for saccades to sustained targets during smooth pursuit or during
smooth anticipation.
|
In the transient test condition, the target was only presented very
briefly (for 10 ms), and therefore the system did not have time to
evaluate the retinal slip. Furthermore, after the flash, there was no
more visual feedback that could be used to program the orienting
saccades. The only available sensory information was the memorized
position error of the target at the moment of the flash onset
PEto. Thus the question here is whether the
saccadic system has access to any other internal information such as,
for example the smooth eye velocity at the moment of the flash onset EVto or the smooth eye displacement SED (=
integral of smooth eye velocity) between the flash and the saccade
onset. To test these hypotheses, we performed a multiple regression
analysis with the dependent variable
S*Amp and the independent
variables PEto, EVto, and
SED. Only saccades with latencies <250 ms were considered in this
analysis. Table 3 summarizes the results
of this analysis. Single regression results showed that the saccade
amplitude was best correlated with PEto. Partial
correlation coefficients in the multiple regression analysis were
significant for PEto but neither for
EVto nor for SED. Clearly, our statistical
analysis showed that there was no other parameter than
PEto that was used for the first saccade programming in the transient test condition (Eq. 2)
|
(2) |
|
(3) |
0.080 ± 1.444 deg,
n = 1,251; mean ± SD). In the transient test
condition, the dependence of the error after the first saccade on SED
confirmed that at this time SED was not used by the saccadic system to
program the saccade.
|
|
Time course of orientation
Until now, we only analyzed the first orienting saccade that occurred after the target reappearance. In the case of the sustained test condition, most of the time the first orienting saccade brought the eye exactly onto the target. If there was a residual error, it was corrected by a second saccade, and the orientation process was completed. Thus no further analysis of the sustained test situation was necessary. But in the case of the transient test condition, our typical example (Fig. 2C) clearly shows that the orientation process went on after the first saccade and that subsequent saccades contributed significantly to the final gaze orientation. In this case, how did the oculomotor system perform this orientation process without any additional visual feedback?
We first quantified the accuracy of the final orientation. For the
orientation to be accurate, the subject had to compensate for the total
smooth eye displacement after the flash. Figure 7A shows the error after the
last orienting saccade PEend as a function of the
total smooth eye displacement between the flash and the moment of the
final orienting saccade SEDtotal. The first order
regression for all subjects pooled together (dashed) follows the
equation
|
(4) |
|
In the following section, the time course of the orientation process
will be analyzed in more detail. Therefore position error PE(t) and smooth eye displacement SED(t) were
sampled at regular 50-ms intervals, and a second-order regression
analysis was performed using the sampled position error as dependent
variable and the sampled smooth eye displacement SED and the position
error at the moment of the flash PEto as
independent variables
|
(5) |
(t) and
(t) for
PEto and SED respectively are shown in Fig.
8A. From the SED coefficient
(t), one can see that the orientation process started
~400 ms after the flash and ended ~800 ms after the flash.
Furthermore, this process compensated not only for SED but also for the
saccadic gain error, which is present at the time of the first saccade.
At the end of the orientation process, the total saccadic gain was
0.989 compared with 0.888 at 250 ms after the flash. For comparison, we
provide in Fig. 8B the mean and SD of the smooth eye
velocity after the flash onset. In Fig. 8, smooth eye velocity traces
are aligned on the flash onset and not on the gap onset, as this was
the case in Fig. 3. Therefore in Fig. 8B, the variability of
the smooth eye movement amplitude is partly due to the variability of
the flash onset.
|
The open triangle symbols in Fig. 8, A and B,
correspond to individual data from the example in Fig.
9A. The coefficient of SED
(
) and the instantaneous smooth eye velocity were measured after
each saccade and follow the average time course of these parameters in
Fig. 8, A and B. The solid symbols in Fig. 8,
A and B, are associated with two other examples
(Fig. 9, B and C) and show that the time course
of the coefficient of SED [
(t)] was not influenced by
the sequence of saccades. This can be observed when looking at the
first saccade of B and C in Fig. 9. A comparison of B with A shows that SED compensation has
already started for the first saccade of B, whereas this was
not the case for the first saccade of A. This behavior is
even more dramatic if we compare C with A. For
the first saccade in C, SED compensation is similar to that
of the third saccade in A. This illustrates that only the
time of saccadic execution determines the amount of SED compensation
and not whether it is the first, second, or third saccade.
|
Dotted vertical lines in Fig. 8, A and B, indicate different landmarks in the orientation process and the eye movement. These were obtained by determining when the measured variable fell <10% of the maximum or rose >10% of the minimum with respect to the total scale. We evaluated the beginning (dotted line 1) and the end (dotted line 3) of the orientation process at 363 and 835 ms, respectively. With the same procedure, we measured the end of the smooth eye movement (dotted line 2) at 440 ms after the flash. Thus there was approximately the same delay of 400 ms between flash onset and the beginning of the compensation process and between the end of the smooth eye movement and the end of the orientation process.
In Fig. 10, A and
B, we tested the hypothesis that a constant delay model
might explain the time course of the orientation process. This means
that at a given instant in time t subjects would compensate
for the smooth eye movement accomplished up to time t
T. Thus the assumption that the compensation
is
proportional to SED accumulated up to a delay T before the
measure of the position error PE(t) mathematically
translates into the following expression
|
(6) |
(t) for different
values of the delay T. The curve for T = 0 ms corresponds to the evolution of
(t) in Fig.
8A. Interestingly, the value of
was a constant in time
(
0.7) for a delay of 400 ms. This is compatible with the
hypothesis that the time course of the compensation process could be
explained by a constant compensatory gain combined with a delayed
signal of the smooth eye displacement. This hypothesis was confirmed by
the analysis performed on each subject individually in Fig.
10B. For each subject, there was a specific time delay
(ranging from 350 to 450 ms) that yielded a constant compensatory gain
(ranging from 0.43 to 0.93).
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In the absence of a smooth eye movement, saccades can be aimed
toward the spatial location of a memorized or visual target (Becker and Jürgens 1979
). In this study, we
perturbed this condition by inducing a smooth anticipatory eye movement
that participated in the gaze displacement. We found a linear addition
of the smooth anticipatory and saccadic motor commands for all test
conditions. Furthermore, in the sustained test condition, the saccadic
system used a predictive component (based on the retinal slip) in
catch-up saccade programming. In the transient test condition, the
saccadic system did not take into account the smooth anticipatory eye
movements in the early stage of the orientation process toward the
target. However, we provided strong evidence for a compensatory
mechanism between both oculomotor subsystems later on in the
orientation process. Thus the oculomotor system can rely on
extraretinal information to control the coordination between its
different components.
Saccade properties
The analysis of the main sequence relationship showed evidence
that smooth anticipatory and saccadic drives are both operational and
are linearly summated during the saccade. The same result was obtained
previously for the smooth pursuit system (de Brouwer et al.
2002
). This finding has two implications. First the smooth anticipatory motor system does not pause during saccades, and thus the
smooth anticipatory component must be removed for the analysis of
saccades executed during anticipation. Second, the saccadic system
interacts in the same way with the smooth pursuit and smooth
anticipatory systems. This finding is compatible with the hypothesis
that these two smooth motor systems share common neural structures.
This view is supported by several behavioral studies (Boman and
Hotson 1988
; Braun et al. 1996
; Kao and
Morrow 1994
).
The saccadic latency histogram showed two main properties. First the
minimum latency for saccades aimed at visual targets is very short
(~80 ms). The use of a gap in our paradigm and the fact that the eyes
were moving at the appearance of the target might explain this behavior
because both factors release active fixation (Krauzlis and Miles
1996a
-c
). Second, saccadic latency histograms in our
experiment are well described by the LATER model (Reddi and
Carpenter 2000
). The recinormal function fitted our data
significantly better than a normal distribution. Thus we showed that
this model does not only apply to saccades following fixation but that
it also describes the latencies of saccades triggered during smooth
anticipatory eye movements in darkness.
Programming of the first orienting saccade
In the sustained test condition, the first orienting saccade was
programmed using the position error and retinal slip sampled 100 ms
before the saccade onset. The behavior was qualitatively the same as
during smooth pursuit, and thus saccades were accurate (de
Brouwer et al. 2002
). However, the coefficient of RS that we
found in Eq. 1 is smaller than in the study by de
Brouwer et al. (2002)
, i.e., 0.059 versus 0.091. It may be due
partly to differences between subjects. Nevertheless, we believe that
the main effect is due to the difference between the active pursuit paradigm of de Brouwer et al. (2002)
and the
anticipatory pursuit in darkness. In our paradigm, subjects had to
reengage active pursuit after the target appearance, which might result
in an underestimation of the retinal slip.
In the case of the transient test condition, the first saccade was
programmed only on the basis of the position error at the moment of the
flash, which was the only retinal information available to the
oculomotor system in this condition. In several previous studies,
subjects had to orient gaze toward a target that was briefly flashed
after the disappearance of a smooth pursuit target (Gellman and
Fletcher 1992
; McKenzie and Lisberger 1986
;
Schlag et al. 1990
). These studies are compatible with
our finding that first orienting saccades only account for the position
error at the moment of the flash. However, these studies only reported data on the first orienting saccade and did not give any indication about the orientation process going on afterward.
Time course of the orientation process
The presence of multiple orientation saccades in our paradigm revealed a compensatory mechanism that accounted for the smooth eye displacement. Compensation started ~400 ms after the flash and lasted until ~400 ms after the end of the smooth eye movement. This process is compatible with the hypothesis of a delayed compensation mechanism. The delay of 400 ms explains the time course of the compensation process and the apparent evolution of the compensatory gain in Fig. 8. This hypothesis has been confirmed independently in each subject, with a fairly constant delay (400 ± 50 ms) associated with a subject-specific constant compensation gain.
What is the origin of this 400-ms delay? Because the compensation is
only apparent after orienting saccades, this delay clearly includes
several components. First it includes the time necessary to make the
decision to trigger a saccade and to program this saccade (estimation
75 ms). Second, there is the duration for the execution of the
saccade (mean
75 ms in our data). The last component (250 ms = 400 - 150 ms) reflects some internal delay between the execution of
the smooth eye movement and the time when an efferent copy of the
smooth motor command can be integrated (to provide SED) and used by the
saccadic system.
In our analysis, we found an overall compensation gain of 0.7, which is
not perfect. This partial compensation could be related to the fact
that targets flashed during a movement may be perceptually mislocalized
(see Schlag and Schlag-Rey 2002
for a review). This perceptual mislocalization, which is called the flash-lag effect, may
influence the compensation gain we obtained.
Proposed model
During orientation toward visual targets, catch-up saccades use
retinal slip information to interact with the smooth pursuit system.
Here, we disrupted the ability of the saccadic system to access retinal
information about the relative target displacement. Nevertheless, the
saccadic system could account for the smooth eye displacement, although
with a 400-ms delay. On the one hand, this delayed mechanism suggests
that the saccadic system has to rely on an efference copy signal of the
smooth motor command. We consider that an efference copy is the only
available signal because proprioception is unlikely to play a role in
ocular orientation (Lewis et al. 2001
). On the other
hand, the length of the delay (400 ms) might reflect the implication of
several sub-cortical and cortical areas in this pathway.
We propose a model that may account for the observed compensation
mechanism (Fig. 11). This model is
composed of three distinct parts: the smooth system (left),
an integrator of the smooth motor command (middle), and the
saccadic system (right). The gap onset acts as a cue for the
smooth system to generate an anticipatory motor command that is sent to
the smooth movement generator to anticipate the expected ramp target.
During the test trials, either a sustained or a flashed target appears.
Because the orientation to sustained targets relies on known mechanisms
(de Brouwer et al. 2002
), we will only consider the case
of the flashed targets in the proposed model.
|
We hypothesize that the flash influences the smooth and saccadic
systems. On the one hand, the flash occurrence is a cue to the smooth
motor system to stop the anticipatory eye movement. At the same time
this cue resets the integrator of the smooth motor command, which
provides SED to the saccadic system. On the other hand, the location of
the flash determines a goal
E for the saccadic system. A
first short-latency orienting saccade is executed based on the retinal
error information provided by the flash. If the saccade is correct, the
efference copy of the saccadic motor command
E* is equal
to the initial position error
E and the goal is achieved.
But meanwhile the eyes have been perturbed by the smooth system. The
integrator of the smooth motor command sends a delayed (250 ms) smooth
eye displacement signal
ESED to the
saccadic system. Based on this information a new saccade is programmed
(75 ms) and executed (75 ms). This process is repeated until the end of
the smooth eye movement. Again because it involves such long delays,
this pathway is only predominant if no retinal information is available.
We will try to propose a hypothesis about the underlying neural
correlates that could support our model. Details about the smooth
pursuit and saccade generators will not be discussed here (see for
example Krauzlis and Stone 1999
for a review). Here, we
concentrate on the pathway integrating the smooth motor command and
programming the compensatory saccades. As we already mentioned, the
400-ms delay suggests that the integration of the smooth motor command
takes place in the cerebral cortex. The internal representation of the
smooth eye displacement
ESED could
be used to update the memorized spatial representation of the flashed target.
We propose that the parietal cortex might play a relay role between the
smooth pursuit and saccadic systems because areas implied in both types
of eye movements project to this brain region. Furthermore, the
parietal cortex is strongly implied in processing extraretinal signals
(Tobler et al. 2001
) and is important for self-movement
integration (Duhamel et al. 1992
; Heide et al.
1995
). Lateral intraparietal region (LIP) and area 7a receive
information about the saccadic commands to encode the location of the
visual stimulus in spatial coordinates (Andersen et al.
1985
; Bremmer et al. 1997
). In addition, LIP
neurons discharge prior to saccades and remain active while remembering
a desired target location (Barash et al. 1991
;
Paré and Wurtz 1997
) and lesions of the posterior
parietal cortex impair the ability to make memory-guided saccades
(Pierrot-Deseilligny et al. 1991
).
Following our hypothesis not only inputs from the saccadic system could
update the internal target representation in the parietal cortex but
there might also be a contribution from the smooth pursuit system
accounting for the smooth eye displacement. In fact, the smooth pursuit
system communicates bilaterally with the posterior parietal cortex
(area 7a) via the medial superior temporal (MST) area (Tusa and
Ungerleider 1988
). Neurons in MST carry information about the
smooth eye movements (Newsome et al. 1988
) that might
come from an efference copy of the smooth motor command (Leigh
and Zee 1999
). Thus smooth movement information could update
the internal representation of targets in space, and saccades could be
triggered whenever the parietal cortex communicates information about a
smooth eye displacement to the saccadic system.
Conclusion
In this paper, we studied the interaction between smooth anticipatory eye movements and saccades. Saccades triggered during smooth anticipation toward a sustained visual target are programmed using the available retinal input, as is the case during sustained smooth pursuit. If flashed targets are presented, no retinal information about the movement is available to program adequate saccades. However, saccades can correct for the smooth eye displacement that took place some time before and this process has been estimated to take ~400 ms. Thus we believe that the saccadic system has access to an efference copy of the smooth motor command to monitor the smooth eye displacement.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
This work was supported by the Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique; the Fondation pour la Recherche Scientifique Médicale; the Belgian program on inter-university poles of attraction initiated by the Belgian state, Prime Minister's office for Science, Technology and Culture (SSTC); and internal research grant (Fonds Spéciaux de Recherche) of the Université Catholique de Louvain.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Address for reprint requests: P. Lefèvre, CESAME, Université Catholique de Louvain, 4, avenue G. Lemaître, 1348 Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium (E-mail: lefevre{at}csam.ucl.ac.be).
| |
REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
A. Kaminiarz, K. Konigs, and F. Bremmer The Main Sequence of Human Optokinetic Afternystagmus (OKAN) J Neurophysiol, June 1, 2009; 101(6): 2889 - 2897. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
G. K. Thaker Neurophysiological Endophenotypes Across Bipolar and Schizophrenia Psychosis Schizophr Bull, July 1, 2008; 34(4): 760 - 773. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
J.-J. Orban de Xivry and P. Lefevre Saccades and pursuit: two outcomes of a single sensorimotor process J. Physiol., October 1, 2007; 584(1): 11 - 23. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
C. de Hemptinne, P. Lefevre, and M. Missal Influence of Cognitive Expectation on the Initiation of Anticipatory and Visual Pursuit Eye Movements in the Rhesus Monkey J Neurophysiol, June 1, 2006; 95(6): 3770 - 3782. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
G. Blohm, M. Missal, and P. Lefevre Direct Evidence for a Position Input to the Smooth Pursuit System J Neurophysiol, July 1, 2005; 94(1): 712 - 721. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
G. Blohm, M. Missal, and P. Lefevre Processing of Retinal and Extraretinal Signals for Memory-Guided Saccades During Smooth Pursuit J Neurophysiol, March 1, 2005; 93(3): 1510 - 1522. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| Visit Other APS Journals Online |