Frontal Eye Field Contributions to Rapid Corrective Saccades
- 1 February 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 97 (2) , 1457-1469
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00433.2006
Abstract
Visually guided movements can be inaccurate, especially if unexpected events occur while the movement is programmed. Often errors of gaze are corrected before external feedback can be processed. Evidence is presented from macaque monkey frontal eye field (FEF), a cortical area that selects visual targets, allocates attention, and programs saccadic eye movements, for a neural mechanism that can correct saccade errors before visual afferent or performance monitoring signals can register the error. Macaques performed visual search for a color singleton that unpredictably changed position in a circular array as in classic double-step experiments. Consequently, some saccades were directed in error to the original target location. These were followed frequently by unrewarded, corrective saccades to the final target location. We previously showed that visually responsive neurons represent the new target location even if gaze shifted errantly to the original target location. Now we show that the latency of corrective saccades is predicted by the timing of movement-related activity in the FEF. Preceding rapid corrective saccades, the movement-related activity of all neurons began before explicit error signals arise in the medial frontal cortex. The movement-related activity of many neurons began before visual feedback of the error was registered and that of a few neurons began before the error saccade was completed. Thus movement-related activity leading to rapid corrective saccades can be guided by an internal representation of the environment updated with a forward model of the error.Keywords
This publication has 65 references indexed in Scilit:
- Incomplete Suppression of Distractor-Related Activity in the Frontal Eye Field Results in Curved SaccadesJournal of Neurophysiology, 2006
- Why Does the Brain Predict Sensory Consequences of Oculomotor Commands? Optimal Integration of the Predicted and the Actual Sensory FeedbackJournal of Neuroscience, 2006
- Using Neuronal Latency to Determine Sensory–Motor Processing Pathways in Reaction Time TasksJournal of Neurophysiology, 2005
- Simulations of Saccade Curvature by Models That Place Superior Colliculus Upstream From the Local Feedback LoopJournal of Neurophysiology, 2005
- Effects of Search Efficiency on Surround Suppression During Visual Selection in Frontal Eye FieldJournal of Neurophysiology, 2004
- Representation of an Abstract Perceptual Decision in Macaque Superior ColliculusJournal of Neurophysiology, 2004
- On Building a Bridge Between Brain and BehaviorAnnual Review of Psychology, 2004
- Sequential Activity of Simultaneously Recorded Neurons in the Superior Colliculus During Curved SaccadesJournal of Neurophysiology, 2003
- SPACE AND ATTENTION IN PARIETAL CORTEXAnnual Review of Neuroscience, 1999
- Countermanding saccades in macaqueVisual Neuroscience, 1995