Walton Mark M G, Gandhi Neeraj J
Department of Otolaryngology, University of Pittsburgh, Eye and Ear Institute, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2006 Oct;96(4):2011-24. doi: 10.1152/jn.01323.2005. Epub 2006 Jun 7.
The countermanding saccade task has been used in many studies to investigate the neural mechanisms that underlie the decision to execute or restrain rapid eye movements. In this task, the presentation of a saccade target is sometimes followed by the appearance of a stop cue that indicates that the subject should cancel the planned movement. Performance has been modeled as a race between motor preparation and cancellation processes. The signal that reaches its activation threshold first determines whether a saccade is generated or cancelled. In these studies, an important parameter is the time required to process the stop cue, referred to as the stop signal reaction time (SSRT). The SSRT is estimated using statistical approaches, the validity of which has not been unequivocally established. A more direct measure of this parameter might be obtainable if a method was available to "unmask" the developing motor command. This can be accomplished by air-puff-evoked blinks, which inhibit pontine omnipause neurons that serve as an inhibitory gate for the saccadic system. In the present study, brief puffs of air were used to elicit blinks at various times while rhesus monkeys performed a countermanding saccade task. If the developing motor command has not yet been cancelled, this should trigger a saccade. When blinks occurred between approximately 50 and 200 ms after target onset, saccades were often evoked. Saccades were rarely evoked more than approximately 70 ms after stop cue onset; this value represents a behavioral evaluation of SSRT and was comparable to the estimates obtained using standard statistical approaches. When saccades occurred near the SSRT on blink trials, they were often hypometric. Furthermore, Monte Carlo simulations were performed to model the effects of blink time on the race model. Overall, the study supports the validity of the statistical methods currently in use.
反向眼跳任务已在许多研究中被用于探究执行或抑制快速眼动决策背后的神经机制。在该任务中,眼跳目标出现后有时会紧接着出现一个停止信号,指示受试者应取消计划中的动作。行为表现被模拟为运动准备和取消过程之间的竞争。首先达到激活阈值的信号决定是否产生眼跳或取消眼跳。在这些研究中,一个重要参数是处理停止信号所需的时间,称为停止信号反应时间(SSRT)。SSRT是使用统计方法估计的,但其有效性尚未得到明确证实。如果有一种方法可以“揭示”正在形成的运动指令,可能会获得对该参数更直接的测量。这可以通过吹气诱发眨眼来实现,吹气会抑制脑桥全暂停神经元,这些神经元作为眼跳系统的抑制性闸门。在本研究中,恒河猴执行反向眼跳任务时,在不同时间使用短暂吹气诱发眨眼。如果正在形成的运动指令尚未被取消,这应该会触发眼跳。当在目标开始后约50至200毫秒之间出现眨眼时,经常会诱发眼跳。在停止信号开始后超过约70毫秒很少诱发眼跳;这个值代表了对SSRT的行为评估,并且与使用标准统计方法获得的估计值相当。在眨眼试验中,当眼跳发生在接近SSRT时,它们通常幅度不足。此外,进行了蒙特卡洛模拟以模拟眨眼时间对竞争模型的影响。总体而言,该研究支持目前使用的统计方法的有效性。