Doctoral Program in Biology, The Graduate Center of The City University of New York, New York, New York, United States.
Department of Biology, The City College of The City University of New York, New York, New York, United States.
J Neurophysiol. 2023 Sep 1;130(3):619-627. doi: 10.1152/jn.00044.2023. Epub 2023 Jul 19.
When visual distractors are presented far from the goal of an impending voluntary saccadic eye movement, saccade execution will occur less frequently about 90 ms after distractor appearance, a phenomenon known as saccadic inhibition. However, it is also known that neural responses in visual and visuomotor areas of the brain will be attenuated if a visual stimulus appears several times in the same location in rapid succession. In particular, such visual adaptation can affect neurons in the mammalian superior colliculus (SC). As the SC is known to be intimately involved in the production of saccadic eye movements, and thus perhaps in saccadic inhibition, we used a memory-guided saccade task to test whether saccadic inhibition in humans would diminish if a distractor appeared several times in quick succession. We found that distractor repetition reduced saccadic inhibition considerably when distractors appeared opposite in space to the goal of the impending saccade. In addition, when three distractors appeared in quick succession but in different, spatially disparate locations, with only the final distractor appearing opposite the saccade goal, saccadic inhibition was reduced by an intermediate level, suggesting that its reduction due to distractor inhibition spatially generalizes. This suggests that distractor suppression can help reduce the impact that suddenly appearing visual stimuli have on purposive eye movement behavior. This work combines approaches studying saccadic inhibition and visual adaptation to demonstrate that saccadic inhibition is largely eliminated with stimulus repetition. This is likely to be the largest demonstrated effect of visual stimulus context on saccadic inhibition. It also provides evidence for the existence of a mechanism that acts to suppress the effect of frequently appearing visual stimuli on purposive eye movement behavior in dynamic visual environments.
当视觉干扰物出现在即将进行的自愿性眼跳目标很远的地方时,大约在干扰物出现后 90 毫秒,眼跳执行的频率会降低,这种现象被称为眼跳抑制。然而,人们也知道,如果一个视觉刺激在短时间内连续出现在同一个位置,视觉和视觉运动区域的神经反应将会减弱。特别是,这种视觉适应会影响哺乳动物上丘(SC)中的神经元。由于 SC 被认为与眼跳运动的产生密切相关,因此也许与眼跳抑制有关,我们使用记忆引导的眼跳任务来测试如果在短时间内连续出现多个干扰物,人类的眼跳抑制是否会减弱。我们发现,当干扰物出现在即将进行的眼跳目标的相反位置时,干扰物的重复出现大大减少了眼跳抑制。此外,当三个干扰物在短时间内连续出现但出现在不同的、空间上离散的位置,只有最后一个干扰物出现在眼跳目标的对面时,眼跳抑制的程度降低了一个中间水平,这表明由于干扰物抑制的空间泛化,其抑制程度降低。这表明干扰物抑制可以帮助减少突然出现的视觉刺激对有目的的眼动行为的影响。这项工作结合了研究眼跳抑制和视觉适应的方法,证明眼跳抑制在很大程度上可以通过刺激重复来消除。这很可能是视觉刺激背景对眼跳抑制影响的最大例证。它还为存在一种机制提供了证据,该机制可以抑制在动态视觉环境中频繁出现的视觉刺激对有目的的眼动行为的影响。