Neural encoding of instantaneous kinematics of eye-head gaze shifts in monkey superior Colliculus

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Abstract

The midbrain superior colliculus is a crucial sensorimotor stage for programming and generating saccadic eye-head gaze shifts. Although it is well established that superior colliculus cells encode a neural command that specifies the amplitude and direction of the upcoming gaze-shift vector, there is controversy about the role of the firing-rate dynamics of these neurons during saccades. In our earlier work, we proposed a simple quantitative model that explains how the recruited superior colliculus population may specify the detailed kinematics (trajectories and velocity profiles) of head-restrained saccadic eye movements. We here show that the same principles may apply to a wide range of saccadic eye-head gaze shifts with strongly varying kinematics, despite the substantial nonlinearities and redundancy in programming and execute rapid goal-directed eye-head gaze shifts to peripheral targets. Our findings could provide additional evidence for an important role of the superior colliculus in the optimal control of saccades.

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APA

van Opstal, A. J. (2023). Neural encoding of instantaneous kinematics of eye-head gaze shifts in monkey superior Colliculus. Communications Biology, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-05305-z

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