Superior
colliculus (SC)
neural activity codes visually guided head-unrestrained gaze movements
in
retinal coordinates.
Neural activity in
the SC is highly correlated with gaze shifts composed of both eye and
head
movements (Freedman and Sparks, 1996; Munoz et al. 1991). Further, SC
stimulation evokes eye and head gaze shifts that converge as a function
of
amplitude and initial gaze position, consistent with an eye-fixed motor
code
for gaze (Klier et al. 2001). We hypothesize that SC neural activity
correlates
best with gaze target location in retinal coordinates. This predicts
that the
optimal directional tuning of SC neurons will change as a specific
function of
amplitude tuning and initial gaze position (Smith and Crawford 2005).
Electrical stimulation and/or visual receptive field examination are
being used
to estimate the optimal gaze amplitude and direction for each recording
location. Monkeys randomly fixate one of three different initial gaze
directions each separated by 20+/-10 degrees for 500 ms and then make
their
head-free gaze shift to one of five visual targets placed along a
semi-circle
of iso-amplitude targets (centered around the position of the receptive
field
maximum for straight-ahead gaze). We have
recorded from eighty one SC neurons, sixty of these have been fully
tested in
the head-unrestrained paradigm. To date,
analysis of 21 neurons shows that SC neurons do indeed show strong
initial gaze
position dependent firing changes during head-unrestrained gaze shifts. These responses cluster around the
theoretical curve for an eye-fixed retinal code, as opposed to a
fixed-vector
or spatially-fixed coding scheme.
Furthermore, some SC neurons show a position-dependent
modulation of
their firing rates as a function of the initial gaze position, as
required for
a non-linear transformation of retinal coordinates into gaze motor
coordinates
(Smith and Crawford 2005).
Support:
Canadian Institute of Health and Research (CIHR). JFXD
supported by National Science and
Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC) and CIHR Training Grant.