Role of Supplementary Eye Field in Saccade Initiation: Executive, Not Direct, Control
- 1 February 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 103 (2) , 801-816
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00221.2009
Abstract
The goal of this study was to determine whether the activity of neurons in the supplementary eye field (SEF) is sufficient to control saccade initiation in macaque monkeys performing a saccade countermanding (stop signal) task. As previously observed, many neurons in the SEF increase the discharge rate before saccade initiation. However, when saccades are canceled in response to a stop signal, effectively no neurons with presaccadic activity display discharge rate modulation early enough to contribute to saccade cancellation. Moreover, SEF neurons do not exhibit a specific threshold discharge rate that could trigger saccade initiation. Yet, we observed more subtle relations between SEF activation and saccade production. The activity of numerous SEF neurons was correlated with response time and varied with sequential adjustments in response latency. Trials in which monkeys canceled or produced a saccade in a stop signal trial were distinguished by a modest difference in discharge rate of these SEF neurons before stop signal or target presentation. These findings indicate that neurons in the SEF, in contrast to counterparts in the frontal eye field and superior colliculus, do not contribute directly and immediately to the initiation of visually guided saccades. However the SEF may proactively regulate saccade production by biasing the balance between gaze-holding and gaze-shifting based on prior performance and anticipated task requirements.Keywords
This publication has 101 references indexed in Scilit:
- Functional Distinction Between Visuomovement and Movement Neurons in Macaque Frontal Eye Field During Saccade CountermandingJournal of Neurophysiology, 2009
- Proactive Inhibitory Control and Attractor Dynamics in Countermanding Action: A Spiking Neural Circuit ModelJournal of Neuroscience, 2009
- Synapses with Inhibitory Neurons Differentiate Anterior Cingulate from Dorsolateral Prefrontal Pathways Associated with Cognitive ControlNeuron, 2009
- Monkey Supplementary Eye Field Neurons Signal the Ordinal Position of Both Actions and ObjectsJournal of Neuroscience, 2009
- Proactive adjustments of response strategies in the stop-signal paradigm.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
- Proactive inhibitory control of movement assessed by event-related fMRINeuroImage, 2008
- Relation of frontal eye field activity to saccade initiation during a countermanding taskExperimental Brain Research, 2008
- Role of the human supplementary eye field in the control of saccadic eye movementsNeuropsychologia, 2007
- Dynamics of saccade target selection: Race model analysis of double step and search step saccade production in human and macaqueVision Research, 2007
- Human Medial Frontal Cortex Mediates Unconscious Inhibition of Voluntary ActionPublished by Elsevier ,2007