Lisberger S G
Department of Physiology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and W. M. Keck Foundation, Center for Integrative Neuroscience, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 1998 Apr;79(4):1918-30. doi: 10.1152/jn.1998.79.4.1918.
Step-ramp target motion evokes a characteristic sequence of presaccadic smooth eye movement in the direction of the target ramp, catch-up targets to bring eye position close to the position of the moving target, and postsaccadic eye velocities that nearly match target velocity. I have analyzed this sequence of eye movements in monkeys to reveal a strong postsaccadic enhancement of pursuit eye velocity and to document the conditions that lead to that enhancement. Smooth eye velocity was measured in the last 10 ms before and the first 10 ms after the first saccade evoked by step-ramp target motion. Plots of eye velocity as a function of time after the onset of the target ramp revealed that eye velocity at a given time was much higher if measured after versus before the saccade. Postsaccadic enhancement of pursuit was recorded consistently when the target stepped 3 degrees eccentric on the horizontal axis and moved upward, downward, or away from the position of fixation. To determine whether postsaccadic enhancement of pursuit was invoked by smear of the visual scene during a saccade, I recorded the effect of simulated saccades on the presaccadic eye velocity for step-ramp target motion. The 3 degrees simulated saccade, which consisted of motion of a textured background at 150 degrees/s for 20 ms, failed to cause any enhancement of presaccadic eye velocity. By using a strategically selected set of oblique target steps with horizontal ramp target motion, I found clear enhancement for saccades in all directions, even those that were orthogonal to target motion. When the size of the target step was varied by up to 15 degrees along the horizontal meridian, postsaccadic eye velocity did not depend strongly either on the initial target position or on whether the target moved toward or away from the position of fixation. In contrast, earlier studies and data in this paper show that presaccadic eye velocity is much stronger when the target is close to the center of the visual field and when the target moves toward versus away from the position of fixation. I suggest that postsaccadic enhancement of pursuit reflects activation, by saccades, of a switch that regulates the strength of transmission through the visual-motor pathways for pursuit. Targets can cause strong visual motion signals but still evoke low presaccadic eye velocities if they are ineffective at activating the pursuit system.
向目标斜坡方向的扫视前平滑眼动、使眼位接近移动目标位置的追赶性眼动,以及几乎与目标速度匹配的扫视后眼速度。我分析了猴子的这一眼动序列,以揭示扫视后追踪眼速度的强烈增强,并记录导致这种增强的条件。在阶梯斜坡目标运动引发的首次扫视前的最后10毫秒和扫视后的首次10毫秒内测量平滑眼速度。将眼速度作为目标斜坡开始后时间的函数作图,结果显示,在给定时间,如果在扫视后测量眼速度,则其比扫视前要高得多。当目标在水平轴上偏心3度并向上运动、向下运动或远离注视位置时,始终会记录到扫视后追踪增强。为了确定扫视过程中视觉场景的模糊是否会引发扫视后追踪增强,我记录了模拟扫视对阶梯斜坡目标运动的扫视前眼速度的影响。由纹理背景以150度/秒的速度运动20毫秒组成的3度模拟扫视未能引起扫视前眼速度的任何增强。通过使用一组精心选择的带有水平斜坡目标运动的倾斜目标步长,我发现所有方向的扫视都有明显增强,即使是那些与目标运动正交的扫视。当目标步长沿水平子午线变化高达15度时,扫视后眼速度在很大程度上既不依赖于初始目标位置,也不依赖于目标是朝着还是远离注视位置移动。相比之下,早期研究和本文中的数据表明,当目标靠近视野中心且目标朝着注视位置移动而不是远离注视位置时,扫视前眼速度要强得多。我认为扫视后追踪增强反映了扫视激活了一个开关,该开关调节通过视觉运动通路进行追踪传输的强度。如果目标在激活追踪系统方面无效,它们可能会产生强烈的视觉运动信号,但仍会引发较低的扫视前眼速度。