Instantaneous movement-unrelated midbrain activity modifies ongoing eye movements

Elife. 2021 May 6:10:e64150. doi: 10.7554/eLife.64150.

Abstract

At any moment in time, new information is sampled from the environment and interacts with ongoing brain state. Often, such interaction takes place within individual circuits that are capable of both mediating the internally ongoing plan as well as representing exogenous sensory events. Here, we investigated how sensory-driven neural activity can be integrated, very often in the same neuron types, into ongoing saccade motor commands. Despite the ballistic nature of saccades, visually induced action potentials in the rhesus macaque superior colliculus (SC), a structure known to drive eye movements, not only occurred intra-saccadically, but they were also associated with highly predictable modifications of ongoing eye movements. Such predictable modifications reflected a simultaneity of movement-related discharge at one SC site and visually induced activity at another. Our results suggest instantaneous readout of the SC during movement generation, irrespective of activity source, and they explain a significant component of kinematic variability of motor outputs.

Keywords: lateral interaction; neuroscience; rhesus macaque; saccade kinematics; saccadic inhibition; sensory-motor integration; superior colliculus.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Action Potentials
  • Animals
  • Electrophysiological Phenomena
  • Eye Movements / physiology*
  • Longitudinal Studies
  • Macaca mulatta
  • Male
  • Mesencephalon / physiology*
  • Specimen Handling
  • Superior Colliculi / physiology*

Grants and funding

The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.