Title :
The brainstem switch for gaze shifts in humans
Author :
Kumar, A.N. ; Leigh, R.J. ; Ramat, S.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Case Western Reserve Univ., Cleveland, OH, USA
Abstract :
Saccades are rapid eye movements that turn both eyes in the same direction. Brainstem omnipause neurons gate saccades. Most natural shifts of the fixation point are between targets lying in different directions and at different distances requiring a combination of saccades and vergence. We investigated whether the visual stimulus, the saccadic command or the vergence command turns off omnipause neurons during gaze shifts. Using the scleral search coil technique, eye movements were measured in seven normal subjects, as they made voluntary, disjunctive gaze shifts comprising saccades and vergence movements. Conjugate oscillations of small amplitude and high frequency were identified during the vergence movement that followed the initial saccade. These oscillations, which are an indication that the omnipause neurons are turned off, corresponded to the saccade onset, and not the vergence eye movement or the visual stimulus. These data were used to test and modify a model of the human saccade-vergence system.
Keywords :
eye; neurophysiology; visual perception; anticipatory responses; ballistic eye movements; behavior marker; binocular vision; brainstem switch; brainstern omnipause neurons; combined saccade-vergence movements; conjugate oscillations; disjunctive gaze shifts; human gaze shifts; rapid eye movements; saccadic command; scleral search coil technique; vergence command; visual stimulus; Biomedical engineering; Biomedical measurements; Coils; Eyes; Humans; Magnetic field measurement; Motion measurement; Nervous system; Neurons; Switches;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2001. Proceedings of the 23rd Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7211-5
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2001.1019080