Bennett Simon J, Barnes Graham R
Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, The Henry Cotton Building, Liverpool, L3 2ET, UK.
Exp Brain Res. 2006 Oct;175(1):1-10. doi: 10.1007/s00221-006-0533-4. Epub 2006 Jun 8.
This study examined the extent to which human subjects predict future target motion for the control of smooth ocular pursuit. Subjects were required to pursue an accelerating target (0, 4 or 8 degrees/s2) that underwent a transient occlusion, and consequently reappeared with the same or increased velocity. Presentations were received in a random or blocked order. Subjects exhibited anticipatory smooth pursuit prior to target motion onset, which in blocked presentations was scaled to the velocity generated by the target acceleration. In random presentations subjects also exhibited anticipatory smooth pursuit, but this was reflected in a more generalized response. During the transient occlusion all subjects exhibited a reduction in eye velocity, which was followed in the majority by a recovery prior to target reappearance. In random presentations, eye velocity decayed and recovered to a level that followed on from the response to the initial ramp. In blocked presentations, there was evidence of improved scaling throughout, which culminated in a significant increase in eye velocity between the start and end of the transient occlusion (8 degrees/s2 only). These findings are difficult to reconcile with reflexive accounts of oculomotor control that perpetuate current eye motion, and hence generate a simple form of prediction using a direct efference copy ("eye-velocity memory"). Rather, they are more consistent with the scaling of smooth pursuit eye movements by means of a more-persistent velocity-based representation, which plays a significant role in both random and blocked stimulus presentations.
本研究考察了人类受试者在控制平稳眼球跟踪时预测未来目标运动的程度。受试者被要求跟踪一个加速目标(0、4或8度/秒²),该目标会经历短暂遮挡,随后重新出现时速度相同或增加。刺激呈现按随机或分块顺序进行。受试者在目标运动开始前表现出预期性的平稳跟踪,在分块呈现中,这种跟踪与目标加速度产生的速度成比例。在随机呈现中,受试者也表现出预期性的平稳跟踪,但这反映在更普遍的反应中。在短暂遮挡期间,所有受试者的眼球速度都有所下降,大多数人在目标重新出现之前眼球速度又恢复了。在随机呈现中,眼球速度衰减并恢复到对初始斜坡反应后的水平。在分块呈现中,有证据表明在整个过程中比例系数有所改善,这最终导致在短暂遮挡开始和结束之间眼球速度显著增加(仅8度/秒²)。这些发现很难与延续当前眼球运动的眼动控制反射性解释相协调,因此难以通过直接传出副本(“眼球速度记忆”)产生简单形式的预测。相反,它们更符合通过基于速度的更持久表征来缩放平稳跟踪眼球运动,这种表征在随机和分块刺激呈现中都起着重要作用。