Barnes G, Grealy M, Collins S
Medical Research Council, Human Movement and Balance Unit, London, UK.
Exp Brain Res. 1997 Oct;116(3):445-55. doi: 10.1007/pl00005772.
Although human subjects cannot normally initiate smooth eye movements in the absence of a moving target, previous experiments have established that such movements can be evoked if the subject is required to pursue a regularly repeated, transient target motion stimulus. We sought to determine whether active pursuit was necessary to evoke such an anticipatory response or whether it could be induced after merely viewing the target motion. Subjects were presented with a succession of ramp target motion stimuli of identical velocity and alternating direction in the horizontal axis. In initial experiments, the target was exposed for only 120 ms as it passed through centre, with a constant interval between presentations. Ramp velocity was varied from +/- 9 to 45 degrees/s in one set of trials; the interval between ramp presentations was varied from 640 to 1920 ms in another. Subjects were instructed either to pursue the moving target from the first presentation or to hold fixation on another, stationary target during the first one, two or three presentations of the moving display. Without fixation, the first smooth movement was initiated with a mean latency of 95 ms after target onset, but with repeated presentations anticipatory smooth movements started to build up before target onset. In contrast, when the subjects fixated the stationary target for three presentations of the moving target, the first movement they made was already anticipatory and had a peak velocity that was significantly greater than that of the first response without prior fixation. The conditions of experiment 1 were repeated in experiment 3 with a longer duration of target exposure (480 ms), to allow higher eye velocities to build up. Again, after three prior fixations, the anticipatory velocity measured at 100 ms after target onset (when visual feedback would be expected to start) was not significantly different to that evoked after the subjects had made three active pursuit responses to the same target motion, reaching a mean of 20 degrees/s for a 50 degrees/s target movement. In a further experiment, we determined whether subjects could use stored information from prior active pursuit to generate anticipatory pursuit in darkness if there was a high expectancy that the target would reappear with identical velocity. Subjects made one predictive response immediately after target disappearance, but very little response thereafter until the time at which they expected the target to reappear, when they were again able to re-vitalize the anticipatory response before target appearance. The findings of these experiments provide evidence that information related to target velocity can be stored and used to generate future anticipatory responses even in the absence of eye movement. This suggests that information for storage is probably derived from a common pre-motor drive signal that is inhibited during fixation, rather than an efference copy of eye movement itself. Furthermore, a high level of expectancy of target appearance can facilitate the release of this stored information in darkness.
尽管在没有移动目标的情况下,人类受试者通常无法发起平滑眼动,但先前的实验已经证实,如果要求受试者追踪有规律重复出现的短暂目标运动刺激,就可以诱发这种眼动。我们试图确定引发这种预期反应是否需要主动追踪,或者仅仅观看目标运动后是否就能诱发。受试者会看到一系列在水平轴上速度相同、方向交替的斜坡目标运动刺激。在最初的实验中,目标经过中心时仅暴露120毫秒,每次呈现之间的间隔恒定。在一组试验中,斜坡速度在+/- 9至45度/秒之间变化;在另一组试验中,斜坡呈现之间的间隔在640至1920毫秒之间变化。受试者被指示要么从第一次呈现开始追踪移动目标,要么在移动显示屏的前一、二或三次呈现期间注视另一个静止目标。在没有注视的情况下,第一个平滑运动在目标开始后平均95毫秒开始,但随着重复呈现,预期的平滑运动在目标开始前就开始形成。相比之下,当受试者在移动目标的三次呈现期间注视静止目标时,他们做出的第一个运动已经是预期性的,并且其峰值速度明显大于没有先前注视时的第一个反应。在实验3中重复了实验1的条件,但目标暴露时间更长(480毫秒),以允许更高的眼速形成。同样,在三次先前的注视之后,在目标开始后100毫秒(此时预计视觉反馈会开始)测量的预期速度与受试者对相同目标运动做出三次主动追踪反应后诱发的速度没有显著差异,对于50度/秒的目标运动,平均达到20度/秒。在进一步的实验中,我们确定如果受试者高度预期目标会以相同速度再次出现,他们是否可以利用先前主动追踪中存储的信息在黑暗中产生预期追踪。受试者在目标消失后立即做出一次预测性反应,但此后几乎没有反应,直到他们预期目标会再次出现的时间,此时他们能够在目标出现之前再次激活预期反应。这些实验的结果提供了证据,表明与目标速度相关的信息可以被存储并用于产生未来的预期反应,即使在没有眼动的情况下。这表明用于存储的信息可能来自于在注视期间被抑制的共同的运动前驱动信号,而不是眼动本身的传出副本。此外,对目标出现的高度预期可以促进在黑暗中释放这种存储的信息。