Behavioral and Brain Sciences



Open Peer Commentary
Findlay & Walker: Saccade generation

Lateral interactions in the superior colliculus, not an extended fixation zone, can account for the remote distractor effect


E. Olivier a1, M. C. Dorris a2 and D. P. Munoz a2
a1 Laboratory of Neurophysiology, School of Medicine, University of Louvain, B-1200 Brussels, Belgium olivier@nefy.ucl.ac.be
a2 Medical Research Council Group in Sensory-Motor Neuroscience, Department of Physiology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6 {mike; doug}@soll.eyeml.queensu.ca http://brain.phgy.queensu.ca/doug_munoz/dpm.htm

Abstract

Recordings of neuronal activity in the monkey superior colliculus (SC) suggest that the two apparently independent effects of a visual distractor on both temporal (latency) and spatial (metrics) saccade parameters may be the result of lateral interactions between subpopulations of saccade-related neurons located at different sites on the motor map of the superior colliculus. One subpopulation is activated during the planing and initiation of a saccade; the other is activated by the appearance of a distractor. The inhibitory or facilitative nature of this interaction depends on the distance between the distractor and the target and is consistent with the complex pattern of intrinsic and commissural collicular connections.