Characteristics of the Pupillary Light Reflex in the Macaque Monkey: Metrics
Regional Primate Research Center and Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195-7330 Pong, Milton and Albert F. Fuchs. Characteristics of the Pupillary Light Reflex in the Macaque Monkey: Metrics. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 953-963, 2000. To investigate wh...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 2000-08, Vol.84 (2), p.953-963 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Regional Primate Research Center and Department of Physiology and
Biophysics, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
98195-7330
Pong, Milton and
Albert F. Fuchs.
Characteristics of the Pupillary Light Reflex in the Macaque
Monkey: Metrics. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 953-963, 2000. To investigate whether the simian light reflex is a
reasonable model for the human light reflex, we elicited pupillary
responses in three behaving rhesus macaques. We measured the change in
pupillary area in response to brief (100 ms), intermediate (1 s), and
long (3-5 s) light flashes delivered by light-emitting diodes while the monkey fixated a stationary target. Individual responses in the
same monkey to either 100-ms or 1-s stimuli of the same light intensity
were quite variable. Nevertheless, in response to the 100-ms stimulus,
average pupillary constriction and peak constriction velocity increased
and latency decreased linearly with the log of stimulus luminance. The
minimum average constriction latency across monkeys for the brightest
flash was 136 ms. A linear decrease of constriction latency with
stimulus luminance also occurs in humans, but their latencies are ~70
ms longer. In addition, peak constriction velocity was highly
correlated with the decrease in pupillary area. Dilation metrics were
not as well related to stimulus luminance as were constriction metrics.
The latency from flash offset to the onset of dilation was relatively
constant, averaging ~480 ms. Peak dilation velocity was also
correlated, but less well, with the increase in pupillary area.
Constriction generally was greater and of longer duration for 1-s light
pulses than for 100-ms pulses of equal luminance. The initial time
courses of the responses to the two stimuli of different durations were identical until ~150 ms after response onset. Human pupillary responses for long and short flashes also have identical initial time
courses. For very long (3-5 s) and very bright constant-luminance stimuli, the simian pupil underwent oscillations at frequencies of
0.9-1.6 Hz. Similar oscillations, called hippus, occur in the human
pupillary light reflex. Like humans, the monkeys also exhibited consensual and binocular pupillary responses. Except for response latency, the pupillary responses in the two primate species are otherwise quite similar. Therefore any knowledge we gain about the
neuronal substrate of the simian light reflex can be expected to have
considerable relevance when extrapolated to humans. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.2000.84.2.953 |