4.4 Article

Influence of Saccade Efference Copy on the Spatiotemporal Properties of Remapping: A Neural Network Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 103, Issue 1, Pages 117-139

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.91191.2008

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Ontario Graduate Scholarship
  3. European Union
  4. Canadian Institute on Health Research
  5. Canada Research Chair

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Keith GP, Blohm G, Crawford JD. Influence of saccade efference copy on the spatiotemporal properties of remapping: a neural network study. J Neurophysiol 103: 117-139, 2010. First published October 21, 2009; doi:10.1152/jn.91191.2008. Remapping of gaze-centered target-position signals across saccades has been observed in the superior colliculus and several cortical areas. It is generally assumed that this remapping is driven by saccade-related signals. What is not known is how the different potential forms of this signal (i.e., visual, visuomotor, or motor) might influence this remapping. We trained a three-layer recurrent neural network to update target position (represented as a hill of activity in a gaze-centered topographic map) across saccades, using discrete time steps and backpropagation-through-time algorithm. Updating was driven by an efference copy of one of three saccade-related signals: a transient visual response to the saccade-target in two-dimensional (2-D) topographic coordinates (Vtop), a temporally extended motor burst in 2-D topographic coordinates (Mtop), or a 3-D eye velocity signal in brain stem coordinates (EV). The Vtop model produced presaccadic remapping in the output layer, with a jumping hill of activity and intrasaccadic suppression. The Mtop model also produced presaccadic remapping with a dispersed moving hill of activity that closely reproduced the quantitative results of Sommer and Wurtz. The EV model produced a coherent moving hill of activity but failed to produce presaccadic remapping. When eye velocity and a topographic (Vtop or Mtop) updater signal were used together, the remapping relied primarily on the topographic signal. An analysis of the hidden layer activity revealed that the transient remapping was highly dispersed across hidden-layer units in both Vtop and Mtop models but tightly clustered in the EV model. These results show that the nature of the updater signal influences both the mechanism and final dynamics of remapping. Taken together with the currently known physiology, our simulations suggest that different brain areas might rely on different signals and mechanisms for updating that should be further distinguishable through currently available single- and multiunit recording paradigms.

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