Neuronal mechanisms of visual stability

被引:447
作者
Wurtz, Robert H. [1 ]
机构
[1] NEI, Sensorimotor Res Lab, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
关键词
stable vision; saccades; corollary discharge; efference copy; visual masking; transsaccadic memory; proprioception;
D O I
10.1016/j.visres.2008.03.021
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Human vision is stable and continuous in spite of the incessant interruptions produced by saccadic eye movements. These rapid eye movements serve vision by directing the high resolution fovea rapidly from one part of the visual scene to another. They should detract from vision because they generate two major problems: displacement of the retinal image with each saccade and blurring of the image during the saccade. This review considers the substantial advances in understanding the neuronal mechanisms underlying this visual stability derived primarily from neuronal recording and inactivation studies in the monkey, an excellent model for systems in the human brain. For the first problem, saccadic displacement, two neuronal candidates are salient. First are the neurons in frontal and parietal cortex with shifting receptive fields that provide anticipatory activity with each saccade and are driven by a corollary discharge. These could provide the mechanism for a retinotopic hypothesis of visual stability and possibly for a transsaccadic memory hypothesis, The second neuronal mechanism is provided by neurons whose visual response is modulated by eye position (gain field neurons) or are largely independent of eye position (real position neurons), and these neurons could provide the basis for a spatiotopic hypothesis. For the second problem, saccadic suppression, visual masking and corollary discharge are well established mechanisms, and possible neuronal correlates have been identified for each. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:2070 / 2089
页数:20
相关论文
共 178 条
[12]  
Breitmeyer B.G., 1984, Visual Masking: An integrative approach
[13]   RELATION BETWEEN COGNITIVE AND MOTOR-ORIENTED SYSTEMS OF VISUAL POSITION PERCEPTION [J].
BRIDGEMAN, B ;
LEWIS, S ;
HEIT, G ;
NAGLE, M .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 1979, 5 (04) :692-700
[14]   A REVIEW OF THE ROLE OF EFFERENCE COPY IN SENSORY AND OCULOMOTOR CONTROL-SYSTEMS [J].
BRIDGEMAN, B .
ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, 1995, 23 (04) :409-422
[15]   OCULAR PROPRIOCEPTION AND EFFERENCE COPY IN REGISTERING VISUAL DIRECTION [J].
BRIDGEMAN, B ;
STARK, L .
VISION RESEARCH, 1991, 31 (11) :1903-1913
[16]   METACONTRAST AND LATERAL INHIBITION [J].
BRIDGEMAN, B .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1971, 78 (06) :528-+
[17]   FAILURE TO DETECT DISPLACEMENT OF VISUAL WORLD DURING SACCADIC EYE-MOVEMENTS [J].
BRIDGEMAN, B ;
HENDRY, D ;
STARK, L .
VISION RESEARCH, 1975, 15 (06) :719-722
[18]   MULTIPLE SOURCES OF OUTFLOW IN PROCESSING SPATIAL INFORMATION [J].
BRIDGEMAN, B .
ACTA PSYCHOLOGICA, 1986, 63 (1-3) :35-48
[19]   RECEPTIVE-FIELDS IN SINGLE CELLS OF MONKEY VISUAL-CORTEX DURING VISUAL TRACKING [J].
BRIDGEMAN, B .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 1973, 6 (03) :141-152
[20]   A THEORY OF VISUAL-STABILITY ACROSS SACCADIC EYE-MOVEMENTS [J].
BRIDGEMAN, B ;
VANDERHEIJDEN, AHC ;
VELICHKOVSKY, BM .
BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES, 1994, 17 (02) :247-258