Response properties of the visual neurons in the prearcuate and periprincipal areas of the prefrontal cortex were examined in awake monkeys. The findings obtained are as follows : (1) Most of the visual neurons responded with various excitatory fashions to a light spot presented in their visual receptive fields (RFs). The response was large when the stimulus was applied to the middle of the RF and became smaller when the stimulus position was moved from this part toward the RF border. (2) The response was affected by the size of the stimulus. The largest response was usually obtained by a small stimulus. The shape, orientation, brightness of the stimulus and the direction of its movement gave little influence on the response strength and pattern. (3) In about a half of the neurons the response was enhanced when the monkey made a saccadic eye-movement toward a visual stimulus in the RF. (4) Some of the above-mentioned response properties were quantitatively different from one another among neuron groups classified according to the eccentricity and size of their RFs. These results suggest that the properties of the neurons are suitable for detecting a visual stimulus occupying a limited extent in the space. prefrontal cortex ; visual neurons ; monkey. © 1985, Tohoku University Medical Press. All rights reserved
CITATION STYLE
Azuma, M. (1985). Response Properties of Prefrontal Visual Neurons in the Awake Monkeys. The Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine, 146(2), 137–148. https://doi.org/10.1620/tjem.146.137
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