Hand position affects saccadic reaction times in monkeys and humans

被引:12
|
作者
Thura, David
Boussaoud, Driss
Meunier, Martine
机构
[1] CNRS, Inst Neurosci Cognit Mediterranee, Unite Mixte Rech 6193, Marseille, France
[2] Aix Marseille Univ, Marseille, France
关键词
D O I
10.1152/jn.01271.2007
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
In daily life, activities requiring the hand and eye to work separately are as frequent as activities requiring tight eye-hand coordination, and we effortlessly switch from one type of activity to the other. Such flexibility is unlikely to be achieved without each effector "knowing" where the other one is at all times, even when it is static. Here, we provide behavioral evidence that the mere position of the static hand affects one eye movement parameter: saccadic reaction time. Two monkeys were trained and 11 humans instructed to perform nondelayed or delayed visually guided saccades to either a right or a left target while holding their hand at a location either near or far from the eye target. From trial to trial, target locations and hand positions varied pseudorandomly. Subjects were tested both when they could and when they could not see their hand. The main findings are 1) the presence of the static hand in the workspace did affect saccade initiation; 2) this interaction persisted when the hand was invisible; 3) it was strongly influenced by the delay duration: hand-target proximity retarded immediate saccades, whereas it could hasten delayed saccades; and 4) this held true both for humans and for each of the two monkeys. We propose that both visual and nonvisual hand position signals are used by the primates' oculomotor system for the planning and execution of saccades, and that this may result in a hand-eye competition for spatial attentional resources that explains the delay-dependent reversal observed.
引用
收藏
页码:2194 / 2202
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] RAPID ADAPTATION OF SACCADIC AMPLITUDE IN HUMANS AND MONKEYS
    ALBANO, JE
    KING, WM
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 1989, 30 (08) : 1883 - 1893
  • [2] Canceling of pursuit and saccadic eye movements in humans and monkeys
    Kornylo, K
    Dill, N
    Saenz, M
    Krauzlis, RJ
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2003, 89 (06) : 2984 - 2999
  • [3] Effects of integration of multiple feature dimensions on saccadic reaction times in visual search for macaque monkeys
    Obuchi, Ai
    Tanaka, Tomohiro
    Ogawa, Tadashi
    NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH, 2011, 71 : E258 - E259
  • [4] Eye position effects in saccadic adaptation in macaque monkeys
    Wulff, Svenja
    Bosco, Annalisa
    Havermann, Katharina
    Placenti, Giacomo
    Fattori, Patrizia
    Lappe, Markus
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2012, 108 (10) : 2819 - 2826
  • [5] Saccadic Reaction Times in Alternating Cover
    Shinomiya, Yuma
    Yamada, Tetsuto
    Suzuki, Kenji
    Komachi, Yuko
    Niida, Takahiro
    STRABISMUS, 2013, 21 (02) : 74 - 77
  • [6] Gamma oscillations in saccadic reaction times
    Haase, VG
    Ruhnau, E
    Poppel, E
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1996, 31 (3-4) : 1165 - 1165
  • [7] SACCADIC REACTION-TIMES AND ACTIVATION OF THE PRELUNATE CORTEX - PARALLEL OBSERVATIONS IN TRAINED RHESUS-MONKEYS
    BOCH, R
    FISCHER, B
    EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 1983, 50 (2-3) : 201 - 210
  • [8] Directional specificity of human saccadic reaction times
    Hirai, N
    Inatomi, T
    ANTHROPOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2003, 111 (04) : 410 - 410
  • [9] Effects of a pretarget distractor on saccade reaction times across space and time in monkeys and humans
    Khan, Aarlenne Z.
    Munoz, Douglas P.
    Takahashi, Naomi
    Blohm, Gunnar
    McPeek, Robert M.
    JOURNAL OF VISION, 2016, 16 (07):
  • [10] Hand position modulates saccadic activity in the frontal eye field
    Thura, David
    Hadj-Bouziane, Fadila
    Meunier, Martine
    Boussaoud, Driss
    BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 2008, 186 (01) : 148 - 153