Abstract
After a saccadic eye movement occurs to an interesting object appearing in the visual field, visual fixation holds its image on the fovea and suppresses saccades to other objects appearing in the visual field. To understand the neural mechanism of visual fixation, the effects of electrical stimulation of the frontal eye field (FEF) on the generation of electrically evoked saccades (Esacs) and the suppression of saccades in trained monkeys were investigated. When the properties of the electrically evoked suppression of visually guided (Vsacs) and memory-guided saccades (Msacs) were examined, two types of suppression were found. Stimulation of a wide area of the FEF suppressed only ipsiversive Vsacs and Msacs at stimulus intensities lower than those for eliciting Esacs, whereas stimulation of a localized area of the FEF suppressed the initiation of both Vsacs and Msacs in any direction during and ∼50 ms after stimulation. However, neither stimulation affected the vector of these saccades. The thresholds for suppression were usually less than 50 μA. The most effective stimulation timing for the suppression of ipsiversive and contraversive Vsacs was ∼40 to 50 ms before saccade onset. Therefore, suppression occurred in the efferent pathway for Vsacs at the premotor rather than the motoneuronal level, most likely in the superior colliculus and/or the paramedian pontine reticular formation. The results suggest that the suppression in the FEF may play a role in maintaining visual fixation by suppressing the generation of saccades. © 2005 New York Academy of Sciences.
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Izawa, Y., Suzuki, H., & Shinoda, Y. (2005). Initiation and suppression of saccades by the frontal eye field in the monkey. In Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences (Vol. 1039, pp. 220–231). New York Academy of Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1196/annals.1325.021
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