Discharge patterns of levator palpebrae superioris motoneurons during vertical lid and eye movements in the monkey
A. F. Fuchs, W. Becker, L. Ling, T. P. Langer and C. R. Kaneko Regional Primate Research Center, University of Washington, Seattle 98195. 1. We recorded single-unit activity in the caudal central nucleus (CCN) of the oculomotor complex in monkeys trained to make vertical saccadic, smooth-pursuit, an...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1992-07, Vol.68 (1), p.233-243 |
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Zusammenfassung: | A. F. Fuchs, W. Becker, L. Ling, T. P. Langer and C. R. Kaneko
Regional Primate Research Center, University of Washington, Seattle 98195.
1. We recorded single-unit activity in the caudal central nucleus (CCN) of
the oculomotor complex in monkeys trained to make vertical saccadic,
smooth-pursuit, and fixation eye movements. We confirmed that our
recordings were from motoneurons innervating the upper lid, because small
lesions placed at the sites of responsive units were recovered among
neurons labeled by horseradish peroxidase (HRP) injections into the levator
palpebrae superioris muscle. 2. For fixations above a threshold lid
position, levator motoneurons discharged at a steady rate, which increased
linearly with upward lid position. The average position sensitivity during
fixation was 2.9 spikes/s per deg, and the average lid motoneuron was
recruited into steady firing when the eye was looking 10 degrees down. 3.
During upward saccades, levator motoneurons discharged a burst of spikes
that began, on average, 7.3 ms before the lid movement if the saccade
started from a straight-ahead position; the lead time decreased
considerably as the initial eye and lid positions shifted downward. The
firing rate usually reached its peak (130-280 spikes/s) at the very onset
of the burst and declined gradually during the course of the saccade. The
steady rate associated with the new fixation position was reached about
halfway during the saccade. All units exhibited a pause in firing during
the initial half of large downward saccades; during small saccades, the
pause was inconspicuous or absent. 4. During vertical sinusoidal smooth
pursuit, levator motoneurons exhibited a sinusoidal modulation in firing
rate, which led eye position by an average of 23 degrees at 0.3 Hz. The
average velocity sensitivity calculated from such data was 0.63 spikes/s
per deg/s. 5. Although they exhibit a number of qualitative similarities,
the discharge patterns of levator motoneurons and superior rectus
motoneurons differ in several respects. First, during a blink, when the lid
undergoes a large depression but the eye exhibits only a brief transient
displacement, levator motoneurons cease firing completely, whereas superior
rectus motoneurons continue to discharge. Second, for all types of
coordinated lid and eye movements, levator motoneurons discharge at lower
firing rates than do superior rectus motoneurons. Third, during saccades,
levator motoneurons have less conspicuous and shorter-las |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1992.68.1.233 |