Microstimulation of Posterior Parietal Cortex Biases the Selection of Eye Movement Goals During Search
Overview
Physiology
Affiliations
People can find objects in a visual scene fast and effortlessly. It is thought that this may be accomplished by creating a map of the outside world that incorporates bottom-up sensory and top-down cognitive inputs--a priority map. Eye movements are made toward the location represented by the highest activity on the priority map. We hypothesized that the lateral intraparietal area (LIP) of posterior parietal cortex acts as such a map. To test this, we performed low current microstimulation on animals trained to perform a foraging task and asked whether we could bias the animals to make a saccade to a particular stimulus, by creating an artificial peak of activity at the location representing that stimulus on the map. We found that microstimulation slightly biased the animals to make saccades to visual stimuli at the stimulated location, without actively generating saccades. The magnitude of this effect was small, but it appeared to be similar for all visual stimuli. We interpret these results to mean that microstimulation slightly biased saccade goal selection to the object represented at the stimulated location in LIP.
Orchestration of saccadic eye-movements by brain rhythms in macaque Frontal Eye Field.
Shaverdi Y, Setarehdan S, Treue S, Esghaei M Sci Rep. 2023; 13(1):22725.
PMID: 38123575 PMC: 10733338. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-49346-0.
Ouerfelli-Ethier J, Salemme R, Fournet R, Urquizar C, Pisella L, Khan A Cereb Cortex Commun. 2021; 2(3):tgab054.
PMID: 34604753 PMC: 8481671. DOI: 10.1093/texcom/tgab054.
Mirpour K, Bisley J J Neurophysiol. 2021; 125(6):2144-2157.
PMID: 33949898 PMC: 8285662. DOI: 10.1152/jn.00559.2020.
The Neurophysiological Representation of Imagined Somatosensory Percepts in Human Cortex.
Bashford L, Rosenthal I, Kellis S, Pejsa K, Kramer D, Lee B J Neurosci. 2021; 41(10):2177-2185.
PMID: 33483431 PMC: 8018772. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2460-20.2021.
Selective Influence and Sequential Operations: A Research Strategy for Visual Search.
Lowe K, Reppert T, Schall J Vis cogn. 2020; 27(5-8):387-415.
PMID: 32982561 PMC: 7518653. DOI: 10.1080/13506285.2019.1659896.