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Optimal Control of Saccades by Spatial-Temporal Activity Patterns in the Monkey Superior Colliculus

A major challenge in computational neurobiology is to understand how populations of noisy, broadly-tuned neurons produce accurate goal-directed actions such as saccades. Saccades are high-velocity eye movements that have stereotyped, nonlinear kinematics; their duration increases with amplitude, whi...

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Autores principales: Goossens, H. H. L. M., van Opstal, A. J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3355059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22615548
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002508
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author Goossens, H. H. L. M.
van Opstal, A. J.
author_facet Goossens, H. H. L. M.
van Opstal, A. J.
author_sort Goossens, H. H. L. M.
collection PubMed
description A major challenge in computational neurobiology is to understand how populations of noisy, broadly-tuned neurons produce accurate goal-directed actions such as saccades. Saccades are high-velocity eye movements that have stereotyped, nonlinear kinematics; their duration increases with amplitude, while peak eye-velocity saturates for large saccades. Recent theories suggest that these characteristics reflect a deliberate strategy that optimizes a speed-accuracy tradeoff in the presence of signal-dependent noise in the neural control signals. Here we argue that the midbrain superior colliculus (SC), a key sensorimotor interface that contains a topographically-organized map of saccade vectors, is in an ideal position to implement such an optimization principle. Most models attribute the nonlinear saccade kinematics to saturation in the brainstem pulse generator downstream from the SC. However, there is little data to support this assumption. We now present new neurophysiological evidence for an alternative scheme, which proposes that these properties reside in the spatial-temporal dynamics of SC activity. As predicted by this scheme, we found a remarkably systematic organization in the burst properties of saccade-related neurons along the rostral-to-caudal (i.e., amplitude-coding) dimension of the SC motor map: peak firing-rates systematically decrease for cells encoding larger saccades, while burst durations and skewness increase, suggesting that this spatial gradient underlies the increase in duration and skewness of the eye velocity profiles with amplitude. We also show that all neurons in the recruited population synchronize their burst profiles, indicating that the burst-timing of each cell is determined by the planned saccade vector in which it participates, rather than by its anatomical location. Together with the observation that saccade-related SC cells indeed show signal-dependent noise, this precisely tuned organization of SC burst activity strongly supports the notion of an optimal motor-control principle embedded in the SC motor map as it fully accounts for the straight trajectories and kinematic nonlinearity of saccades.
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spelling pubmed-33550592012-05-21 Optimal Control of Saccades by Spatial-Temporal Activity Patterns in the Monkey Superior Colliculus Goossens, H. H. L. M. van Opstal, A. J. PLoS Comput Biol Research Article A major challenge in computational neurobiology is to understand how populations of noisy, broadly-tuned neurons produce accurate goal-directed actions such as saccades. Saccades are high-velocity eye movements that have stereotyped, nonlinear kinematics; their duration increases with amplitude, while peak eye-velocity saturates for large saccades. Recent theories suggest that these characteristics reflect a deliberate strategy that optimizes a speed-accuracy tradeoff in the presence of signal-dependent noise in the neural control signals. Here we argue that the midbrain superior colliculus (SC), a key sensorimotor interface that contains a topographically-organized map of saccade vectors, is in an ideal position to implement such an optimization principle. Most models attribute the nonlinear saccade kinematics to saturation in the brainstem pulse generator downstream from the SC. However, there is little data to support this assumption. We now present new neurophysiological evidence for an alternative scheme, which proposes that these properties reside in the spatial-temporal dynamics of SC activity. As predicted by this scheme, we found a remarkably systematic organization in the burst properties of saccade-related neurons along the rostral-to-caudal (i.e., amplitude-coding) dimension of the SC motor map: peak firing-rates systematically decrease for cells encoding larger saccades, while burst durations and skewness increase, suggesting that this spatial gradient underlies the increase in duration and skewness of the eye velocity profiles with amplitude. We also show that all neurons in the recruited population synchronize their burst profiles, indicating that the burst-timing of each cell is determined by the planned saccade vector in which it participates, rather than by its anatomical location. Together with the observation that saccade-related SC cells indeed show signal-dependent noise, this precisely tuned organization of SC burst activity strongly supports the notion of an optimal motor-control principle embedded in the SC motor map as it fully accounts for the straight trajectories and kinematic nonlinearity of saccades. Public Library of Science 2012-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3355059/ /pubmed/22615548 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002508 Text en Goossens, van Opstal. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Goossens, H. H. L. M.
van Opstal, A. J.
Optimal Control of Saccades by Spatial-Temporal Activity Patterns in the Monkey Superior Colliculus
title Optimal Control of Saccades by Spatial-Temporal Activity Patterns in the Monkey Superior Colliculus
title_full Optimal Control of Saccades by Spatial-Temporal Activity Patterns in the Monkey Superior Colliculus
title_fullStr Optimal Control of Saccades by Spatial-Temporal Activity Patterns in the Monkey Superior Colliculus
title_full_unstemmed Optimal Control of Saccades by Spatial-Temporal Activity Patterns in the Monkey Superior Colliculus
title_short Optimal Control of Saccades by Spatial-Temporal Activity Patterns in the Monkey Superior Colliculus
title_sort optimal control of saccades by spatial-temporal activity patterns in the monkey superior colliculus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3355059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22615548
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002508
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