Back to Search Start Over

Persistence of the dark-background-contingent gaze upshift during visual fixations of rhesus monkeys.

Authors :
Spivak, Oleg
Thier, Peter
Barash, Shabtai
Source :
Journal of Neurophysiology. 10/15/2014, Vol. 112 Issue 8, p1999-2005. 7p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

During visual fixations, the eyes are directed so that the image of the target (object of interest) falls on the fovea. An exception to this rule was described in macaque monkeys (though not in humans): dark background induces a gaze shift upwards, sometimes large enough to shift the target's image off the fovea. In this article we address an aspect not previously rigorously studied, the time course of the upshift. The time course is critical for determining whether the upshift is indeed an attribute of visual fixation or, alternatively, of saccades that precede the fixation. These alternatives lead to contrasting predictions regarding the time course of the upshift (durable if the upshift is an attribute of fixation, transient if caused by saccades). We studied visual fixations with dark and bright background in three monkeys. We confined ourselves to a single upshift-inducing session in each monkey so as not to study changes in the upshift caused by training. Already at their first sessions, all monkeys showed clear upshift. During the first 0.5 s after the eye reached the vicinity of the target, the upshift was on average larger, but also more variable, than later in the trial; this initial high value 1) strongly depended on target location and was maximal at locations high on the screen, and 2) appears to reflect mostly the intervals between the primary and correction saccades. Subsequently, the upshift stabilized and remained constant, well above zero, throughout the 2-s fixation interval. Thus there is a persistent background-contingent upshift genuinely of visual fixation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00223077
Volume :
112
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Neurophysiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
108657545
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00666.2013