Journal article
Direction and contrast tuning of macaque MSTd neurons during saccades
NA Crowder, NSC Price, MJ Mustari, MR Ibbotson
Journal of Neurophysiology | AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC | Published : 2009
Abstract
Saccades are rapid eye movements that change the direction of gaze, although the full-field image motion associated with these movements is rarely perceived. The attenuation of visual perception during saccades is referred to as saccadic suppression. The mechanisms that produce saccadic suppression are not well understood. We recorded from neurons in the dorsal medial superior temporal area (MSTd) of alert macaque monkeys and compared the neural responses produced by the retinal slip associated with saccades (active motion) to responses evoked by identical motion presented during fixation (passive motion). We provide evidence for a neural correlate of saccadic suppression and expand on two c..
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Grants
Awarded by National Eye Institute
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was funded by Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Vision Science Grant CE0561903 to M. R. Ibbotson, National Institutes of Health Grants EY-06069 and RR-0165 to M. J. Mustari, and a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada grant to N. A. Crowder.