Oommen Brian S, Smith Ryan M, Stahl John S
Departments of Neurology, Louis Stokes Cleveland Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2004 Mar;155(1):9-18. doi: 10.1007/s00221-003-1694-z. Epub 2003 Nov 12.
Mammals with foveas (or analogous retinal specializations) frequently shift gaze without moving the head, and their behavior contrasts sharply with "afoveate" mammals, in which eye and head movements are strongly coupled. The ability to move the eyes without moving the head could reflect a gating mechanism that blocks a default eye-head synergy when an attempted head movement would be energetically wasteful. Based upon such considerations of efficiency, we predicted that for saccades to targets lying within the ocular motor range, the tendency to generate a head movement would depend upon a subject's expectations regarding future directions of gaze. We tested this hypothesis in two experiments with normal human subjects instructed to fixate sequences of lighted targets on a semicircular array. In the target direction experiment, we determined whether subjects were more likely to move the head during a small gaze shift if they expected that they would be momentarily required to make a second, larger shift in the same direction. Adding the onward-directed target increased significantly the distribution of final head positions (customary head orientation range, CHOR) observed during fixation of the primary target from 16.6+/-4.9 degrees to 25.2+/-7.8 degrees. The difference reflected an increase in the probability, and possibly the amplitude, of head movements. In the target duration experiment, we determined whether head movements were potentiated when subjects expected that gaze would be held in the vicinity of the target for a longer period of time. Prolonging fixation increased CHOR significantly from 53.7+/-18.8 degrees to 63.2+/-15.9 degrees. Larger head movements were evoked for any given target eccentricity, due to a narrowing in the gap between the x-intercepts of the head amplitude:target eccentricity relationship. The results are consistent with the idea that foveate mammals use knowledge of future gaze direction to influence the coupling of saccadic commands to premotor circuitry of the head. While the circuits ultimately mediating the coupling may lie within the brainstem, our results suggest that the cerebrum plays a supervisory role, since it is a likely seat of expectation regarding target behavior. Eye-head coupling may reflect separate gating and scaling mechanisms, and changes in head movement tendencies may reflect parametric modulation of either mechanism.
具有中央凹(或类似视网膜特化结构)的哺乳动物经常在不移动头部的情况下转移视线,它们的行为与“无中央凹”的哺乳动物形成鲜明对比,在“无中央凹”的哺乳动物中,眼睛和头部的运动紧密耦合。在不移动头部的情况下移动眼睛的能力可能反映了一种门控机制,当试图进行头部运动在能量上会造成浪费时,该机制会阻断默认的眼-头协同作用。基于这种效率方面的考虑,我们预测,对于向眼动范围内的目标进行的扫视,产生头部运动的倾向将取决于受试者对未来注视方向的预期。我们在两项实验中对正常人类受试者进行了测试,要求他们注视半圆形阵列上的一系列发光目标。在目标方向实验中,我们确定,如果受试者预期他们将在同一方向上瞬间进行第二次更大的视线转移,则他们在小幅度视线转移期间是否更有可能移动头部。添加向前指向的目标显著增加了在注视主要目标期间观察到的最终头部位置(习惯头部定向范围,CHOR)的分布,从16.6±4.9度增加到25.2±7.8度。这种差异反映了头部运动的概率增加,可能还有幅度增加。在目标持续时间实验中,我们确定当受试者预期视线将在目标附近保持较长时间时,头部运动是否会增强。延长注视时间使CHOR从53.7±18.8度显著增加到63.2±15.9度。对于任何给定的目标偏心度,由于头部幅度与目标偏心度关系的x轴截距之间的差距缩小,会引发更大的头部运动。这些结果与以下观点一致,即具有中央凹的哺乳动物利用未来注视方向的知识来影响扫视指令与头部运动前电路的耦合。虽然最终介导这种耦合的电路可能位于脑干内,但我们的结果表明大脑起着监督作用,因为它可能是对目标行为预期的所在位置。眼-头耦合可能反映了单独的门控和缩放机制,头部运动倾向的变化可能反映了这两种机制的参数调制。