Eye Position Influence on the Parieto‐occipital Area PO (V6) of the Macaque Monkey
- 1 December 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 7 (12), 2486-2501
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1460-9568.1995.tb01047.x
Abstract
The aim of this work was to study the effect of eye position on the activity of neurons of area PO (V6), a cortical region located in the most posterior part of the superior parietal lobule. Experiments were carried out on three awake macaque monkeys. Animals sat in a primate chair in front of a large screen, and fixated a small spot of light projected in different screen locations while the activity of single neurons was extracellularly recorded. Both visual and non-visual neurons were found. About 48% of visual and 32% of non-visual neurons showed eye position-related activity in total darkness, while in approximately 61% of visual response was modulated by eye position in the orbit. Eye position fields and/or gain fields were different from cell to cell, going from large and quite planar fields up to peak-shaped fields localized in more or less restricted regions of the animal's field of view. The spatial distribution of fixation point locations evoking peak activity in the eye position-sensitive population did not show any evident laterality effect, or significant top/bottom asymmetry. Moreover, the cortical distribution of eye position-sensitive neurons was quite uniform all over the cortical region studied, suggesting the absence of segregation for this property within area PO (V6). In the great majority of visual neurons, the receptive field 'moved' with gaze according to eye displacements, remaining at the same retinotopic coordinates, as is usual for visual neurons. In some cases, the receptive field did not move with gaze, remaining anchored to the same spatial location regardless of eye movements ('real-position cells'). A model is proposed suggesting how eye position-sensitive visual neurons might build up real-position cells in local networks within area PO (V6). The presence in area PO (V6) of real-position cells together with a high percentage of eye position-sensitive neurons, most of them visual in nature, suggests that this cortical area is engaged in the spatial encoding of extrapersonal visual space. Since lesions of the superior parietal lobule in humans produce deficits in visual localization of targets as well as in arm-reaching for them, and taking into account that the monkey's area PO (V6) is reported to be connected with the premotor area 6, we suggest that area PO (V6) supplies the premotor cortex with the visuo-spatial information required for the visual control of arm-reaching movements.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Identification and viuotopic organization of areas PO and POd in Cebus monkeyJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1994
- Functional Properties of Neurons in the Anterior Bank of the Parieto‐occipital Sulcus of the Macaque MonkeyEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 1991
- Corticocortical connections of anatomically and physiologically defined subdivisions within the inferior parietal lobuleJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1990
- A back-propagation programmed network that simulates response properties of a subset of posterior parietal neuronsNature, 1988
- OPTIC ATAXIA: A SPECIFIC DISRUPTION IN VISUOMOTOR MECHANISMSBrain, 1988
- Encoding of Spatial Location by Posterior Parietal NeuronsScience, 1985
- Visuo-oculomotor properties of cells in the superior colliculus of the alert catJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1980
- Two‐dimensional maps of the cerebral cortexJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1980
- Ferrier lecture - Functional architecture of macaque monkey visual cortexProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1977
- DEFECTIVE VISUAL LOCALIZATION IN FOCAL BRAIN WOUNDSBrain, 1972