Abstract: | The character of eye movements during electrical stimulation of the medial wall of the brain beneath the cruciate sulcus and of the inferior wall of the cruciate sulcus itself in the frontal cortex was investigated in waking cats. Stimulation of this part of the brain evoked two types of eye movements: unidirectional concomitant saccades, whose direction and amplitude were independent of the original position of the eyes in the orbits, and saccades into the central position (so-called centering saccades). Unidirectional saccades appeared in response to stimulation of the caudal part of the investigated zone, centering saccades in response to stimulation of its rostral part. Analysis of the directions and amplitudes of unidirectional saccades suggested the retinotopic organization of the caudal zone. Systematic changes in the magnitude and direction of vertical saccades during stimulation of the deep parts of the cruciate sulcus indicated previsely the projection of the vertical meridian of the retina. Reappearance of vertical saccades evoked by stimulation of certain parts of the medial wall of the brain suggests the existence of more than one retinotopically organized zone in this region. Inconstancy of stereotaxic coordinates of the oculomotor area, studied in different animals, was noted.Institute for Problems in Information Transmission, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 16, No. 6, pp. 761–766, November–December, 1984. |