Kim Kayeon, Lee Choongkil
Department of Psychology, Seoul National University, Kwanak, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Department of Psychology, Seoul National University, Kwanak, Seoul, Republic of Korea
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Aug 1;118(2):1361-1375. doi: 10.1152/jn.00758.2016. Epub 2017 Jun 14.
When a saccadic eye movement is made toward a visual stimulus, the variability in accompanying primary visual cortex (V1) activity is related to saccade latency in both humans and simians. To understand the nature of this relationship, we examined the functional link between V1 activity and the initiation of visually guided saccades during the gap saccade task, in which a brief temporal gap is inserted between the turning off of a fixation stimulus and the appearance of a saccadic target. The insertion of such a gap robustly reduces saccade latency and facilitates the occurrence of extremely short-latency (express) saccades. Here we recorded single-cell activity from macaque V1 while monkeys performed the gap saccade task. In parallel with the gap effect on saccade latency the neural latency (time of first spike) of V1 response elicited by the saccade target became shorter, and the firing rate increased as the gap duration increased. Similarly, neural latency was shorter and firing rate was higher before express saccades relative to regular-latency saccades. In addition to these posttarget changes, the level of spontaneous spike activity during the pretarget period was negatively correlated with both neural and saccade latencies. These results demonstrate that V1 activity correlates with the gap effect and indicate that trial-to-trial variability in the state of V1 accompanies the variability of neural and behavioral latencies. The link between neural activity in monkey primary visual cortex (V1) and visually guided behavioral response is confirmed with the gap saccade paradigm. Results indicated that the variability in neural latency of V1 spike activity correlates with the gap effect on saccade latency and that the trial-to-trial variability in the state of V1 before the onset of saccade target correlates with the variability in neural and behavioral latencies.
当眼睛向视觉刺激做出扫视运动时,人类和灵长类动物伴随的初级视觉皮层(V1)活动的变异性与扫视潜伏期有关。为了理解这种关系的本质,我们在间隙扫视任务中研究了V1活动与视觉引导扫视启动之间的功能联系,在该任务中,在注视刺激关闭和扫视目标出现之间插入短暂的时间间隙。插入这样的间隙会显著缩短扫视潜伏期,并促进极短潜伏期(快速)扫视的出现。在这里,我们在猴子执行间隙扫视任务时记录了猕猴V1的单细胞活动。与间隙对扫视潜伏期的影响并行,扫视目标引发的V1反应的神经潜伏期(第一个峰值的时间)变短,并且随着间隙持续时间的增加,放电率增加。同样,相对于常规潜伏期扫视,快速扫视之前的神经潜伏期更短,放电率更高。除了这些目标后变化外,目标前时期的自发尖峰活动水平与神经潜伏期和扫视潜伏期均呈负相关。这些结果表明,V1活动与间隙效应相关,并表明V1状态的逐次试验变异性伴随着神经和行为潜伏期的变异性。猴子初级视觉皮层(V1)中的神经活动与视觉引导行为反应之间的联系通过间隙扫视范式得到了证实。结果表明,V1尖峰活动的神经潜伏期变异性与间隙对扫视潜伏期的影响相关,并且在扫视目标开始之前V1状态的逐次试验变异性与神经和行为潜伏期的变异性相关。