Dean Heather L, Crowley Justin C, Platt Michael L
Deprtment of Neurobiology, Duke University Medical Center, 433 Bryan Research Bldg., Research Dr., Box 3209, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2004 Nov;92(5):3056-68. doi: 10.1152/jn.00691.2003. Epub 2004 Jun 16.
Previous neurophysiological studies have reported that neurons in posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) respond after eye movements, and that these responses may vary with ambient illumination. In monkeys, PCC neurons also respond after the illumination of large visual patterns but not after the illumination of small visual targets on either reflexive saccade tasks or peripheral attention tasks. These observations suggest that neuronal activity in PCC is modulated by behavioral context, which varies with the timing and spatial distribution of visual and oculomotor events. To test this hypothesis, we measured the spatial and temporal response properties of single PCC neurons in monkeys performing saccades in which target location and movement timing varied unpredictably. Specifically, an unsignaled delay between target onset and movement onset permitted us to temporally dissociate changes in PCC activity associated with either event. Response fields constructed from these data demonstrated that many PCC neurons were activated after the illumination of small contralateral visual targets, as well as after the onset of contraversive saccades guided by those targets. In addition, the PCC population maintained selectivity for small contralateral targets during delays of up to 600 ms. Overall, PCC activation was highly variable trial to trial and selective for a broad range of directions and amplitudes. Planar functions described response fields nearly as well as broadly tuned 2-dimensional Gaussian functions. Additionally, the overall responsiveness of PCC neurons decreased during delays when both a fixation stimulus and a saccade target were visible, suggesting a modulation by divided attention. Finally, the strength of the neuronal response after target onset was correlated with saccade accuracy on delayed-saccade trials. Thus PCC neurons may signal salient visual and oculomotor events, consistent with a role in visual orienting and attention.
以往的神经生理学研究报告称,后扣带回皮质(PCC)中的神经元在眼球运动后会产生反应,并且这些反应可能会随环境光照而变化。在猴子中,PCC神经元在大视觉模式受到光照后也会产生反应,但在反射性扫视任务或周边注意力任务中,小视觉目标受到光照后则不会产生反应。这些观察结果表明,PCC中的神经元活动受到行为背景的调节,而行为背景会随视觉和眼球运动事件的时间和空间分布而变化。为了验证这一假设,我们测量了猴子在进行扫视时单个PCC神经元的空间和时间反应特性,其中目标位置和运动时间是不可预测地变化的。具体来说,目标开始和运动开始之间的无信号延迟使我们能够在时间上区分与任一事件相关的PCC活动变化。根据这些数据构建的反应场表明,许多PCC神经元在小对侧视觉目标受到光照后以及在由这些目标引导的对侧扫视开始后被激活。此外,在长达600毫秒的延迟期间,PCC群体对小对侧目标保持选择性。总体而言,PCC激活在每次试验中变化很大,并且对广泛的方向和幅度具有选择性。平面函数对反应场的描述几乎与广泛调谐的二维高斯函数一样好。此外,当注视刺激和扫视目标都可见时,PCC神经元的整体反应性在延迟期间会降低,这表明存在注意力分散的调节作用。最后,目标开始后神经元反应的强度与延迟扫视试验中的扫视准确性相关。因此,PCC神经元可能会发出显著的视觉和眼球运动事件信号,这与在视觉定向和注意力方面的作用一致。