>
Fa   |   Ar   |   En
   The saccadic re-centering bias is associated with activity changes in the human superior colliculus  
   
نویسنده krebs r.m. ,schoenfeld m.a. ,boehler c.n. ,song a.w. ,woldorff m.g.
منبع frontiers in human neuroscience - 2010 - دوره : 4 - شماره : 0
چکیده    Being able to effectively explore our visual world is of fundamental importance,and it has been suggested that the straight-ahead gaze (primary position) might play a special role in this context. we employed fmri in humans to investigate how neural activity might be modulated for saccades relative to this putative default position. using an endogenous cueing paradigm,saccade direction and orbital starting position were systematically manipulated,resulting in saccades toward primary position (centripetal) and away from primary position (centrifugal) that were matched in amplitude,directional predictability,as well as orbital starting position. in accord with earlier research,we found that fmri activity in the superior colliculus (sc),as well as in the frontal eye fields and the intraparietal sulcus,was enhanced contralateral to saccade direction across all saccade conditions. furthermore,the sc exhibited a relative activity decrease during re-centering relative to centrifugal saccades,a pattern that was paralleled by faster saccadic reaction times. in contrast,activity within the cortical eye fields was not significantly modulated during re-centering saccades as compared to other saccade types,suggesting that the re-centering bias is predominantly implemented at a subcortical rather than cortical processing stage. such a modulation might reflect a special coding bias facilitating the return of gaze to a default position in the gaze space in which retinotopic and egocentric reference frames are aligned and from which the visual world can be effectively explored. © 2010 krebs,schoenfeld,boehler,song and woldorff.
کلیدواژه Cortical eye fields; Eye movement; fMRI; Re-centering bias; Superior colliculus
آدرس center for cognitive neuroscience,duke university,durham,nc,united states,department of neurology,otto-von-guericke-university,magdeburg, Germany, department of neurology,otto-von-guericke-university,magdeburg,germany,kliniken schmieder,allensbach,germany,department of behavioral neurology,leibniz-institute for neurobiology,magdeburg, Germany, center for cognitive neuroscience,duke university,durham,nc,united states,department of behavioral neurology,leibniz-institute for neurobiology,magdeburg, Germany, brain imaging and analysis center,duke university,durham,nc, United States, center for cognitive neuroscience,duke university,durham,nc,united states,department of psychiatry,duke university,durham,nc, United States
 
     
   
Authors
  
 
 

Copyright 2023
Islamic World Science Citation Center
All Rights Reserved