4.8 Article

A sensory memory to preserve visual representations across eye movements

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26756-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Montana State University
  2. University of Utah
  3. Research to Prevent Blindness, New York, NY
  4. [NIH R01EY026924]
  5. [R01NS113073]
  6. [NIH R01EY031477]
  7. [NSF1811543]
  8. [NIH EY014800]

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The study reveals a delayed enhancement of neural response in extrastriate areas during saccadic eye movements, which maintains pre-saccadic information until post-saccadic information is received, enabling an integrated representation of visual scenes.
A late enhancement of the perisaccadic neural response may exist in extrastriate areas. Here the authors show this preserves pre-saccadic information until the post-saccadic information is received, maintaining an integrated representation of the visual scene across saccadic eye movements. Saccadic eye movements (saccades) disrupt the continuous flow of visual information, yet our perception of the visual world remains uninterrupted. Here we assess the representation of the visual scene across saccades from single-trial spike trains of extrastriate visual areas, using a combined electrophysiology and statistical modeling approach. Using a model-based decoder we generate a high temporal resolution readout of visual information, and identify the specific changes in neurons' spatiotemporal sensitivity that underly an integrated perisaccadic representation of visual space. Our results show that by maintaining a memory of the visual scene, extrastriate neurons produce an uninterrupted representation of the visual world. Extrastriate neurons exhibit a late response enhancement close to the time of saccade onset, which preserves the latest pre-saccadic information until the post-saccadic flow of retinal information resumes. These results show how our brain exploits available information to maintain a representation of the scene while visual inputs are disrupted.

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