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1.
Neurons in posterior parietal cortex of the awake, trained monkey respond to passive visual and/or somatosensory stimuli. In general, the receptive fields of these cells are large and nonspecific. When these neurons are studied during visually guided hand movements and eye movements, most of their activity can be accounted for by passive sensory stimulation. However, for some visual cells, the response to a stimulus is enhanced when it is to be the target for a saccadic eye movement. This enhancement is selective for eye movements into the visual receptive field since it does not occur with eye movements to other parts of the visual field. Cells that discharge in association with a visual fixation task have foveal receptive fields and respond to the spots of light used as fixation targets. Cells discharging selectively in association with different directions of tracking eye movements have directionally selective responses to moving visual stimuli. Every cell in our sample discharging in association with movement could be driven by passive sensory stimuli. We conclude that the activity of neurons in posterior parietal cortex is dependent on and indicative of external stimuli but not predictive of movement.  相似文献   

2.
We examined responses of neurons of the field 21b of the cat brain cortex to presentation of moving visual stimuli of different forms. Characteristics of the responses of about 54% of the studied neurons showed that in these cases configurations of the contours of moving stimuli were to a certain extent discriminated. Most neurons selectively reacting to changes in the form of the stimulus were dark-sensitive units (they generated optimum responses to presentation of dark visual stimuli on the light background). Detailed examination of the spatial infrastructure of receptive fields (RFs) of the neurons and comparison of this structure with the selectivity of neuronal responses showed that there is no significant correlation between static organization of the RF and responses of the neuron to the movements of stimuli of different forms. We hypothesize that the dynamic infrastructure of the RF and the combined activity of functional groups of neurons, whose RFs spatially overlap the RF of the neuron under study, play a definite role in the mechanisms responsible for neuronal discrimination of the form of the visual stimulus. Neirofiziologiya/Neurophysiology, Vol. 38, No. 1, pp. 61–71, January–February, 2006.  相似文献   

3.
Responses of caudate neurons to two kinds of visual stimuli, namely diffuse light and a more local stimulus (a slit of light), oriented in different directions on a screen, were studied in alert cats during natural fixation of the gaze. The number of neurons which responded to local stimulation was several times greater than the number responding to diffuse light. Besides on-responses to local stimulation, a more distinct phase of inhibition of activity during presentation of the stimulus and off-responses also appeared. The latent periods of responses to both kinds of stimulation were commensurate at 40–90 msec for most neurons. Differences in neuronal responses also were found on a change in orientation of the slit. The results are discussed from the standpoint of participation of the caudate nucleus in visual information analysis.  相似文献   

4.
Extracellular recordings were carried out in the visual cortex of behaving monkeys trained on a fixation/detection task, during which a target light was displayed stationary or suddenly moving on a tangent translucent screen. The responses of visual cortical cells to fast moving stimuli during steady fixation and those obtained during rapid eye movements (saccades) which moved their receptive field across a stationary stimulus, were studied. Areas V1 and V2 were explored. When tested with rapidly moving stimuli (500 deg/sec) during steady fixation, neurons in each area behaved in almost the same way. About one fourth of them were activated, the remainder showing either no response (little more than a half of them) or a reduction of the spontaneous firing rate. In both areas, some of the neurons activated during steady fixation did not respond or responded very weakly during eye motion at saccadic velocity (500 +/- 50 deg/sec). Neurons of this type, which we refer to as 'real motion' cells, could somehow contribute to the maintenance of visual stability during the execution of large eye movements.  相似文献   

5.
In our previous studies of hand manipulation task-related neurons, we found many neurons of the parietal association cortex which responded to the sight of three-dimensional (3D) objects. Most of the task-related neurons in the AIP area (the lateral bank of the anterior intraparietal sulcus) were visually responsive and half of them responded to objects for manipulation. Most of these neurons were selective for the 3D features of the objects. More recently, we have found binocular visual neurons in the lateral bank of the caudal intraparietal sulcus (c-IPS area) that preferentially respond to a luminous bar or place at a particular orientation in space. We studied the responses of axis-orientation selective (AOS) neurons and surface-orientation selective (SOS) neurons in this area with stimuli presented on a 3D computer graphics display. The AOS neurons showed a stronger response to elongated stimuli and showed tuning to the orientation of the longitudinal axis. Many of them preferred a tilted stimulus in depth and appeared to be sensitive to orientation disparity and/or width disparity. The SOS neurons showed a stronger response to a flat than to an elongated stimulus and showed tuning to the 3D orientation of the surface. Their responses increased with the width or length of the stimulus. A considerable number of SOS neurons responded to a square in a random dot stereogram and were tuned to orientation in depth, suggesting their sensitivity to the gradient of disparity. We also found several SOS neurons that responded to a square with tilted or slanted contours, suggesting their sensitivity to orientation disparity and/or width disparity. Area c-IPS is likely to send visual signals of the 3D features of an object to area AIP for the visual guidance of hand actions.  相似文献   

6.
Responses of 117 single- or multi-units in the auditory cortex (AC) of bats (Myotis lucifugus) to tone bursts of different stimulus durations (1– 400 ms) were studied over a wide range of stimulus intensities to determine how stimulus duration is represented in the AC. 36% of AC neurons responded more strongly to short stimulus durations showing short-pass duration response functions, 31% responded equally to all pulse durations (i.e., all-pass), 18% responded preferentially to stimuli having longer durations (i.e., long-pass), and 15% responded to a narrow range of stimulus durations (i.e., band-pass). Neurons showing long-pass and short-pass duration response functions were narrowly distributed within two horizontal slabs of the cortex, over the rostrocaudal extent of the AC. The effects of stimulus level on duration selectivity were evaluated for 17 AC neurons. For 65% of these units, an increase in stimulus intensity resulted in a progressive decrease in the best duration. In light of the unusual intensity-dependent duration responses of AC neurons, we hypothesized that the response selectivities of AC neurons is different from that in the brainstem. This hypothesis was validated by results of study of the duration response characteristics of single neurons in the inferior colliculus. Accepted: 8 November 1996  相似文献   

7.
We studied the responses of neurons of the extrastriate cortical area 21b of the cat to changes in orientation of the movements of visual stimuli within the receptive field (RF) of the neuron under study. Our experiments demonstrated that 24 of 108 cells (22%) responded differentially to a certain extent to orientation of the movements of visual stimuli. As a whole, neurons of the area 21b did not demonstrate fine tuning on the optimum angle of orientation. In many cases, neuronal responses to different orientations of the movement of visual stimulus depended significantly on specific parameters of this stimulus (its shape, dimensions, and contrast). Some directionally sensitive neurons responded to a change in orientation of the movement of visual stimuli by modification of the index of directionality. We also studied spatial organization of the RF of neurons with the presentation of stationary visual stimuli. Comparison of the neuronal responses to a change in orientation of the movements of stimuli and to presentation of stationary stimuli showed that the correlation between the orientation sensitivity of the neuron under study and the stationary functional organization of its RF was insignificant. We hypothesize that inhibitory processes and subthreshold influences from a space surrounding the RF play a special role in the formation of the neuronal responses generated in the associative visual cortical regions to visual stimulation.  相似文献   

8.
Responses of neurons in area 7 of the parietal association cortex during and after formation of a defensive conditioned reflex to sound were recorded in waking cats. Changes in spike responses of the neurons as a result of the onset of conditioned reflex limb movements were observed in 68% of neurons. Spike responses of neurons formed as a result of learning appeared only if conditioned-reflex limb movements appeared, and they were not observed if, for some reason or other, movements were absent after presentation of the positive conditioned stimulus or on extinction of the reflex. Responses of 46% neurons to conditioned stimulation preceded the conditioned-reflex motor responses by 50–450 msec. The remaining responding neurons were recruited into the response after the beginning of movement. Characteristic spike responses of neurons to the conditioned stimulus appeared 500–900 msec before the beginning of movement and, in the case of appearance of special, "prolonged" motor responses of limb withdrawal, evoked by subsequent reinforcing stimulation.  相似文献   

9.
The purpose of this study was to explore the effects of spatial and temporal properties on the expected responses of visual neurons that have linear receptive fields (RFs), particularly those having a mirror symmetric distribution of spatial subregions. Receptive fields that are symmetric in at least one spatial dimension occur in neurons of the retina, the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN), and the visual cortex of mammals. Responses to flashing bars, moving bars, and moving edges were studied for different configurations of an analog RF model in which spatial and temporal aspects were varied independently. Responses of the model at intermediate stimulus speeds were found to agree with responses in the literature for X and Y units of the LGN and often for simple units of the visual cortex. In particular, having separated regions of response to light and dark edges, an identifying property of simple cells, was found to be a linear consequence of RF regions responding inversely to stimuli of opposite polarity. Model differences from responses of cortical complex units show that a linear model cannot mimic their responses, and imply that complex units employ major nonlinearities in coding image polarity (light vs dark), which signifies a nonlinearity in coding intensity. Because sudden flux changes inherent in flashing bars test mainly temporal RF properties, and slowly moving edges test mainly spatial properties, these two tests form a useful minimal set with which to describe and classify RFs. The usefulness of this set derives both from its sensitivity to spatial and temporal variables, and from the correlation between the linearity of a cell's processing of stimulus intensity and its RF classification.  相似文献   

10.
Spatial updating in human parietal cortex   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Merriam EP  Genovese CR  Colby CL 《Neuron》2003,39(2):361-373
Single neurons in monkey parietal cortex update visual information in conjunction with eye movements. This remapping of stimulus representations is thought to contribute to spatial constancy. We hypothesized that a similar process occurs in human parietal cortex and that we could visualize it with functional MRI. We scanned subjects during a task that involved remapping of visual signals across hemifields. We observed an initial response in the hemisphere contralateral to the visual stimulus, followed by a remapped response in the hemisphere ipsilateral to the stimulus. We ruled out the possibility that this remapped response resulted from either eye movements or visual stimuli alone. Our results demonstrate that updating of visual information occurs in human parietal cortex.  相似文献   

11.
The stability of visual perception despite eye movements suggests the existence in the visual system of neurons able to recognize whether the movement of a retinal image is due to the actual movement of an object or is self-induced by the ocular movement. We found neurons of this type in several areas of the monkey visual cortex and named them "real-motion" cells. Extracellular recordings were carried out from single neurons of the cortical prestriate area V3A of two awake macaque monkeys. Eighty-seven neurons were studied by comparing their responses during stimulus movement across the stationary receptive field, and receptive-field movement across the stationary stimulus. This visual stimulation was presented against a uniform visual background, in darkness or against a textured background. Neurons which were not real-motion in light (45/87) maintained their behaviour in darkness, while about 40% of real-motion cells lost this behaviour in darkness. Both real-motion and non real-motion cells maintained the same behaviour when tested against a uniform or textured visual background but often, texture increased the difference in the response that real-motion cells showed between stimulus and eye movement. These data suggest that the eye-movement signal which reaches real-motion cells and is responsible for their behaviour may be either retinal or extraretinal in nature. This double innervation is in good agreement with perceptual phenomena related to the detection of movement in the visual field.  相似文献   

12.
Extracellular recordings were used to characterize responses to cutaneous mechanical stimulation of 78 neurons in the rat nucleus submedius (SM). Thirty-nine of these units were activated by some type of cutaneous mechanical stimulation. Eighteen cells were activated exclusively by noxious stimuli. In 13 of these cells, responses were of swift onset and relatively rapid termination following stimulus application. In contrast, in three neurons responses were delayed both in onset and termination, and in two the response was immediate, but the markedly increased evoked activity outlasted stimulus application by 13 min. Receptive fields (RFs) of these nociceptive neurons were generally large, although none were bilateral. Four SM neurons were activated by innocuous stimuli, but their maximal response was obtained only after noxious stimulation. Responses of all of these neurons were of immediate onset and recovery, and their RFs were large (two were bilateral). Twelve SM neurons were activated maximally by innocuous stimuli. Responses of seven of these cells were immediate in onset and termination, while that of three were delayed in both onset and termination. Two of the 12 innocuous-only neurons quickly became unresponsive to repeated stimulus applications, and could be reactivated only after a rest period during which no stimuli were applied. RFs of these units were also generally large, and in three cases were bilateral. Five SM neurons responded by decreasing, or completely ceasing, their firing subsequent to noxious-only (n = 2), or innocuous-only (n = 3) stimulation. Four of these units had large RFs (two were bilateral). The remaining 39 SM neurons could not be activated by any type of mechanical cutaneous stimulation we tried. Electrical stimulation of the ventrolateral orbital cortex (VLO) was employed to examine frontal cortical projections of 21 SM neurons. Ten of these units were activated, although all of them synaptically rather than antidromically, and two were inhibited. There was no clear-cut relationship between neuronal location, physiological type, RF site, or VLO stimulation effects among the 39 SM neurons. These results provide further support for the involvement of SM neurons in nociceptive information signaling, and suggest additionally that the role of the nucleus is not limited to nociception but encompasses a wider range of cutaneous sensations.  相似文献   

13.
Extracellular recordings were used to characterize responses to cutaneous mechanical stimulation of 78 neurons in the rat nucleus submedius (SM). Thirty-nine of these units were activated by some type of cutaneous mechanical stimulation. Eighteen cells were activated exclusively by noxious stimuli. In 13 of these cells, responses were of swift onset and relatively rapid termination following stimulus application. In contrast, in three neurons responses were delayed both in onset and termination, and in two the response was immediate, but the markedly increased evoked activity outlasted stimulus application by 13 min. Receptive fields (RFs) of these nociceptive neurons were generally large, although none were bilateral. Four SM neurons were activated by innocuous stimuli, but their maximal response was obtained only after noxious stimulation. Responses of all of these neurons were of immediate onset and recovery, and their RFs were large (two were bilateral). Twelve SM neurons were activated maximally by innocuous stimuli. Responses of seven of these cells were immediate in onset and termination, while that of three were delayed in both onset and termination. Two of the 12 innocuous-only neurons quickly became unresponsive to repeated stimulus applications, and could be reactivated only after a rest period during which no stimuli were applied. RFs of these units were also generally large, and in three cases were bilateral. Five SM neurons responded by decreasing, or completely ceasing, their firing subsequent to noxious-only (n = 2), or innocuous-only (n = 3) stimulation. Four of these units had large RFs (two were bilateral). The remaining 39 SM neurons could not be activated by any type of mechanical cutaneous stimulation we tried.

Electrical stimulation of the ventrolateral orbital cortex (VLO) was employed to examine frontal cortical projections of 21 SM neurons. Ten of these units were activated, although all of them synaptically rather than antidromically, and two were inhibited. There was no clear-cut relationship between neuronal location, physiological type, RF site, or VLO stimulation effects among the 39 SM neurons.

These results provide further support for the involvement of SM neurons in nociceptive information signaling, and suggest additionally that the role of the nucleus is not limited to nociception but encompasses a wider range of cutaneous sensations.  相似文献   

14.
Responses of 189 neurons of the somatosensory cortex to stimulation of the nonspecific reticular (R) and anteroventral (AV) nuclei of the thalamus were studied in cats anesthetized with thiopental and immobilized with tubocurarine. In the series of experiments with stimulation of R and, for comparison, of the specific ventral posterolateral nucleus (VPL), 132 neurons were recorded, of which 22 (16.7%) did not respond to stimulation of these nuclei, 77 (58.3%) responded only to stimulation of VPL, and 33 (25%) responded to stimulation of both VPL and R. In the series of experiments in which AV was stimulated, 57 neurons were recorded. Eight (14.8%) responded to neither stimulus and 25 (43.1%) responded only to stimulation of VPL; 24 responded to stimulation of AV (42.1%), and of these, 10 also responded to stimulation of VPL. A characteristic feature of unit responses in the somatosensory cortex to stimulation of the nonspecific nuclei was the irregularity of the responses and their longer latent period. Only five cells responded sooner to stimulation of the nonspecific nuclei than to stimulation of VPL. Responses of the nonspecific nuclei to stimulation appeared clearly only if the stimulation was repetitive. Preliminary stimulation of R blocks the response to stimulation of VPL during the subsequent 40–60 msec.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol.4, No.4, pp. 384–390, July–August, 1972.  相似文献   

15.
Responses of 251 neurons in the anterior part of the middle suprasylvian gyrus to stimulation of primary sensory (auditory, visual, somatosensory) areas and also to acoustic, visual, and somatosensory stimuli were studied in acute experiments on cats anesthetized with chloralose (40 mg/kg) and pentobarbital (20 mg/kg). Three groups of neurons were distinguished by their responses to stimulation of the primary sensory areas: those responding by an increased firing rate (117) or by inhibition (35) and those not responding (99). Responses of 193 neurons to stimulation of the peripheral afferent systems were analyzed. Neurons of the parietal associative cortex responded more frequently to cortical stimulation than to peripheral. By the duration of the latent period of their response to cortical stimulation the neurons were divided into three groups: those with short (less than 20 msec), medium (20–30 msec), and long latent periods (over 30 msec). The first group was the largest.Kemerovo State Medical Institute. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 4, No. 5, pp. 524–530, September–October, 1972.  相似文献   

16.
Summary In the fly,Calliphora erythrocephala, visual stimuli presented in an asymmetrical position with respect to the fly elicit roll or tilt movements of the head by which its dorsal part is moved towards the light areas of the surroundings (Figs. 4–7). The influence of passive body roll and tilt (gravitational stimulus) on the amplitude of these active head movements was investigated for two types of visual stimuli: (1) a dark hollow hemisphere presented in different parts of the fly's visual field, and (2) a moving striped pattern stimulating the lateral parts of one eye only.The response characteristics of the flies in the bimodal situation in which the gravitational stimulus was paired with stimulation by the dark hollow hemisphere can be completely described by the addition of the response characteristics for both unimodal situations, i.e. by the gravity-induced and visually induced characteristics (Figs. 8, 9). Therefore, the stimulus efficacy of the dark hollow hemisphere is independent of (=invariant with respect to) the flies' spatial position. The advantage of this type of interaction between gravity and visual stimulation for the control of body posture near the horizontal is discussed.In contrast, the efficacy of moving patterns depends on (=non-invariant with respect to) the spatial position of the walking fly. Regressive pattern movements exhibit their stronger efficacy with respect to progressive ones only when the gravity receptor system of the legs is stimulated. The stronger efficacy of downward vs upward movements can only be demonstrated when the flies are walking horizontally, independently of whether the leg gravity receptor system is stimulated by gravity or not (Fig. 10).The results are discussed with respect (1) to the invariance and non-invariance of the efficacy of visual stimuli with respect to the direction of the field of gravity, (2) to the formation of reference lines by the gravitational field which are used by the walking fly to determine the orientation of visual patterns, and (3) to the possible location of the underlying convergence between gravitationally and visually evoked excitation. As all types of head responses occur only in walking flies, we also discussed the possible influences of some physiological processes like arousal, proprioceptive feedback during walking and various peripheral sensory inputs on the performance of behavioural responses in the fly (Fig. 11).  相似文献   

17.
Extracellular responses of 151 spontaneously active neurons in a small area of the cortex of the posterior suprasylvian gyrus to flashes, clicks, and electrodermal stimulation were studied in unanesthetized cats immobilized with D-tubocurarine. Altogether 63% of neurons responded to the stimuli, of which flashes were the most effective. The proportions of polybi-, and monosensory responding neurons were 60, 18, and 22% respectively. Responding neurons were found throughout the thickness of the cortex, but most frequently at depths of 1000–2000 µ from the brain surface. The latent periods varied not only for different cells (from 20 to 90 msec to all stimuli), but also for the same cell. Responses were unstable, prolonged (over 1 sec) and complex in their dynamic pattern (several phases of increase and decrease in frequency of spontaneous discharges or merely a prolonged increase or decrease in its frequency). In the character of their responses the neurons were divided into 4 groups: 1) poly- and bisensory with equivalent responses to all stimuli; 2) poly- and bi-sensory with nonequivalent responses; 3) monosensory, and 4) nonresponding. The results show that this area of the posterior suprasylvian gyrus is part of the associative cortex with projection predominantly of the visual receptor.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 4, No. 4, pp. 375–383, July–August, 1972.  相似文献   

18.
Responses of 114 pulvinar neurons to moving visual stimuli were studied. Most (79) neurons possessed spontaneous activity (10–25 spikes/sec). Of 59 neurons tested, 31 responded to stimulation of both retinas and 28 to stimulation only of the contralateral retina. Of 114 neurons, 41 responded only to movement of black objects, while the rest responded to movement of both black and light objects. According to the character of their responses to movement the neurons were divided into two main groups. The first group consisted of neurons sensitive to the direction of motion and responding with a spike discharge to movement in one direction and by inhibition to movement in the opposite direction. The second group included neurons insensitive to the direction of motion and responding by an equal number of discharges to movements in two opposite directions. Besides these two main groups, other neurons responding to movement in two opposite directions by discharges with different temporal distribution and also neurons which changed the character of their response from nondirectional to directional depending on the size of the moving stimulus, were found.L. A. Orbeli Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR, Erevan. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 10, No. 4, pp. 348–354, July–August, 1978.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND: Neurons in primary auditory cortex are known to be sensitive to the locations of sounds in space, but the reference frame for this spatial sensitivity has not been investigated. Conventional wisdom holds that the auditory and visual pathways employ different reference frames, with the auditory pathway using a head-centered reference frame and the visual pathway using an eye-centered reference frame. Reconciling these discrepant reference frames is therefore a critical component of multisensory integration. RESULTS: We tested the reference frame of neurons in the auditory cortex of primates trained to fixate visual stimuli at different orbital positions. We found that eye position altered the activity of about one third of the neurons in this region (35 of 113, or 31%). Eye position affected not only the responses to sounds (26 of 113, or 23%), but also the spontaneous activity (14 of 113, or 12%). Such effects were also evident when monkeys moved their eyes freely in the dark. Eye position and sound location interacted to produce a representation for auditory space that was neither head- nor eye-centered in reference frame. CONCLUSIONS: Taken together with emerging results in both visual and other auditory areas, these findings suggest that neurons whose responses reflect complex interactions between stimulus position and eye position set the stage for the eventual convergence of auditory and visual information.  相似文献   

20.
Neurons responding to tactile and visual stimulation were found in the caudal section of the cruciate slucus ventral bank in awake cats. Tactile receptive fields were located on the face, mainly around the mouth. Visual stimuli evoked a response when presented close to the tactile receptive field. It was found that the visual responses of these bimodal neurons located in layer VI of the cortex display spatial consistency. The position of these visual receptive fields remained constant through saccadic eye movements, while still linked to the tactile receptive field.Institute for Research into Information Transmission, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neifofiziologiya, Vol. 18, No. 6, pp. 800–805, November–December, 1986.  相似文献   

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