Saccades to both vision and touch are modified following adaptation but cross-modal transfers are asymmetrical

被引:0
作者
Batikh, Ali [1 ]
Gaveau, Valerie [1 ]
Panouilleres, Muriel T. N. [1 ]
Koun, Eric [1 ]
Salemme, Romeo [1 ]
Farne, Alessandro [1 ]
Pelisson, Denis [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Lyon Neurosci Res Ctr, INSERM, IMPACT Team,CNRS,U1028,UMR5292, Lyon, France
关键词
cross-modal transfer; saccadic adaptation; touch; vision; SOMATOSENSORY TARGETS; VOLUNTARY SACCADES; SENSORIMOTOR ADAPTATION; EYE-MOVEMENTS; INTEGRATION; ACTIVATION; ERROR; PERCEPTION; MECHANISMS; SIGNALS;
D O I
10.1152/jn.00154.2024
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Adaptation of reactive saccades (RS), made toward the sudden appearance of stimuli in our environment, is a plastic mechanism thought to occur at the motor level of saccade generation. As saccadic oculomotor commands integrate multisensory information in the parietal cortex and superior colliculus, adaptation of RS should occur not only toward visual but also tactile targets. In addition, saccadic adaptation in one modality (vision or touch) should transfer cross-modally. To test these predictions, we used the double-step target paradigm to adapt rightward saccades made at two different eccentricities toward the participants' index and middle fingers, identified either visually (experiment 1) or tactually (experiment 2). In each experiment, the rate of adaptation induced for the adapted modality and the rate of adaptation transfer to the nonadapted modality were compared with that measured in a control (no adaptation) session. Results revealed that touch-triggered RS can be adapted as well as visually triggered ones. Moreover, the transfer pattern was asymmetric: visual saccadic adaptation transferred fully to tactile saccades, whereas tactile saccadic adaptation, despite full generalization to nonadapted fingers, transferred only partially to visual saccades. These findings disclose that in the case of tactile saccades, adaptation can be elicited in the absence of postsaccadic visual feedback. In addition, the asymmetric adaptation transfer across sensory modalities suggests that the adaptation locus for tactile saccades may occur in part upstream of the final motor pathway common to all saccades. These findings bring new insights both on the functional loci(us) and on the error signals of RS adaptation.
引用
收藏
页码:1183 / 1197
页数:15
相关论文
共 46 条
[1]   Long-lasting modifications of saccadic eye movements following adaptation induced in the double-step target paradigm [J].
Alahyane, N ;
Pélisson, D .
LEARNING & MEMORY, 2005, 12 (04) :433-443
[2]   Oculomotor plasticity:: Are mechanisms of adaptation for reactive and voluntary saccades separate? [J].
Alahyane, Nadia ;
Salemme, Romeo ;
Urquizar, Christian ;
Cotti, Julien ;
Guillaume, Alain ;
Vercher, Jean-Louis ;
Pelisson, Denis .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 2007, 1135 (01) :107-121
[3]   Multisensory Processing in Review: from Physiology to Behaviour [J].
Alais, David ;
Newell, Fiona N. ;
Mamassian, Pascal .
SEEING AND PERCEIVING, 2010, 23 (01) :3-38
[4]   Are somatosensory saccades voluntary or reflexive? [J].
Amlôt, R ;
Walker, R .
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 2006, 168 (04) :557-565
[5]   The control of saccadic adaptation: implications for the scanning of natural visual scenes [J].
Bahcall, DO ;
Kowler, E .
VISION RESEARCH, 2000, 40 (20) :2779-2796
[6]  
BAHILL AT, 1983, VISION RES, V23, P1573, DOI 10.1016/0042-6989(83)90171-2
[7]   Saccades guided by somatosensory stimuli [J].
Blanke, O ;
Grüsser, OJ .
VISION RESEARCH, 2001, 41 (18) :2407-2412
[8]   Differential cortical activation during saccadic adaptation [J].
Blurton, Steven P. ;
Raabe, Markus ;
Greenlee, Mark W. .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2012, 107 (06) :1738-1747
[9]   Auditory spatial localization: Developmental delay in children with visual impairments [J].
Cappagli, Giulia ;
Gori, Monica .
RESEARCH IN DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES, 2016, 53-54 :391-398
[10]   Motor space structures perceptual space:: Evidence from human saccadic adaptation [J].
Collins, Therese ;
Dore-Mazars, Karine ;
Lappe, Markus .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 2007, 1172 :32-39