Heading Representation in MST: Sensory Interactions and Population Encoding
Departments of Neurology, Neurobiology, and Anatomy, Ophthalmology, Brain and Cognitive Sciences, and The Center for Visual Science, The University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York 14642 Page, William K. and Charles J. Duffy. Heading Representation in MST: Sensory Interactions and Po...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 2003-04, Vol.89 (4), p.1994-2013 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Departments of Neurology, Neurobiology, and Anatomy, Ophthalmology,
Brain and Cognitive Sciences, and The Center for Visual Science, The
University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York 14642
Page, William K. and
Charles J. Duffy.
Heading Representation in MST: Sensory Interactions and
Population Encoding. J. Neurophysiol. 89: 1994-2013, 2003. Dorsal medial superior temporal cortex (MSTd)'s
population response encodes heading direction from optic flow seen
during fixation or pursuit. Vestibular responses in these
neurons might enhance heading representation during self-movement in
light or provide an alternative basis for heading representation during self-movement in darkness. We have compared these hypotheses by recording MSTd neuronal responses to translational self-movement in
light and darkness, during fixation and pursuit. Translational movement
in darkness, with gaze fixed, evokes transient vestibular responses
during acceleration that reverse directionality during deceleration and
persist without a fixation target. Movement in light increases the
amplitude and duration of these responses so they mimic responses to
simulated optic flow presented without translational movement. Pursuit
of a stationary landmark during translational movement combines
vestibular and visual effects with pursuit responses. Vestibular,
visual, and pursuit effects interact so that single neuron heading
responses vary across the stimulus period and between stimulus
conditions. Combining single neuron responses by population vector
summation yields stronger heading estimates in light than in darkness,
with gaze fixed or during landmark pursuit. Adding translational
movement to robust optic flow stimuli does not augment the population
response. Vestibular signals enhance single neuron responses in light
and maintain population heading estimation in darkness, potentially
extending MSTd's heading representation across the continuum of
naturalistic self-movement conditions. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.00493.2002 |