4.4 Article

The time course of the tonic oculomotor proprioceptive signal in area 3a of somatosensory cortex

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 106, Issue 1, Pages 71-77

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00668.2010

Keywords

eye position; oculomotor proprioception; smooth pursuit; vestibuloocular reflex

Funding

  1. Zegar
  2. Keck
  3. Dana Foundations
  4. National Eye Institute [R24-EY-015634, R21-EY-017938, R01-EY-017039, R01-EY-014978]
  5. [T32-HD-07430-12]
  6. [GM-07367]
  7. [T32-EY-013933]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Xu Y, Wang X, Peck C, Goldberg ME. The time course of the tonic oculomotor proprioceptive signal in area 3a of somatosensory cortex. J Neurophysiol 106: 71-77, 2011. First published February 23, 2011; doi:10.1152/jn.00668.2010.-A proprioceptive representation of eye position exists in area 3a of primate somatosensory cortex (Wang X, Zhang M, Cohen IS, Goldberg ME. Nat Neurosci 10: 640-646, 2007). This eye position signal is consistent with a fusimotor response (Taylor A, Durbaba R, Ellaway PH, Rawlinson S. J Physiol 571: 711-723, 2006) and has two components during a visually guided saccade task: a short-latency phasic response followed by a tonic response. While the early phasic response can be excitatory or inhibitory, it does not accurately reflect the eye's orbital position. The late tonic response appears to carry the proprioceptive eye position signal, but it is not clear when this component emerges and whether the onset of this signal is reliable. To test the temporal dynamics of the tonic proprioceptive signal, we used an oculomotor smooth pursuit task in which saccadic eye movements and phasic proprioceptive responses are suppressed. Our results show that the tonic proprioceptive eye position signal consistently lags the actual eye position in the orbit by similar to 60 ms under a variety of eye movement conditions. To confirm the proprioceptive nature of this signal, we also studied the responses of neurons in a vestibuloocular reflex (VOR) task in which the direction of gaze was held constant; response profiles and delay times were similar in this task, suggesting that this signal does not represent angle of gaze and does not receive visual or vestibular inputs. The length of the delay suggests that the proprioceptive eye position signal is unlikely to be used for online visual processing for action, although it could be used to calibrate an efference copy signal.

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