Fixational saccade-related activity of pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus neurons in behaving monkeys

Fixational saccades are small, involuntary eye movements that occur during attempted visual fixation. Recent studies suggested that several cognitive processes affect the occurrence probability of fixational saccades. Thus, there might be an interaction between fixational saccade‐related motor signa...

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Veröffentlicht in:The European journal of neuroscience 2014-08, Vol.40 (4), p.2641-2651
Hauptverfasser: Okada, Ken-ichi, Kobayashi, Yasushi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Fixational saccades are small, involuntary eye movements that occur during attempted visual fixation. Recent studies suggested that several cognitive processes affect the occurrence probability of fixational saccades. Thus, there might be an interaction between fixational saccade‐related motor signals and cognitive signals. The pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus (PPTN) in the brainstem has anatomical connections with numerous saccade‐related and limbic areas. Previously, we reported that a group of PPTN neurons showed transient phasic bursts or a pause in activity during large visually guided and spontaneous saccades, and also showed sustained tonic changes in activity with task context. We hypothesised that single PPTN neurons would relay both fixational saccade‐related and task context‐related signals, and might function as an interface between the motor and limbic systems. We recorded the activity of PPTN neurons in behaving monkeys during a reward‐biased task, and analysed neuronal activity for small fixational saccades during visual fixation, and compared it with the activity for large visually guided targeting saccades and large spontaneous saccades during intertrial intervals. A population of PPTN neurons exhibited a fixational saccade‐related phasic increase in activity, and the majority of them also showed activity modulation with large targeting saccades. In addition, a group of these neurons showed a task‐related tonic increase in activity during the fixation period, and half of them relayed the saccade signal only when the neuron exhibited higher tonic activity during the task execution period. Thus, fixational saccade‐related signals of PPTN neurons overlap with tonic task‐related signals, and might contribute to the cognitive modulation of fixational saccades. Fixational saccades are small, involuntary eye movements that occur during attempted visual fixation. We examined fixational saccade‐related activity of neurons in the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus (PPTN), which has anatomical connections with saccade‐related and limbic areas. Single PPTN neurons showed both transient phasic fixational saccade‐related and sustained tonic task‐related activity modulation, and might contribute to the cognitive modulation of fixational saccades.
ISSN:0953-816X
1460-9568
DOI:10.1111/ejn.12632