Author:
FORTE JASON,PEIRCE JONATHAN W.,KRAFT JAMES M.,KRAUSKOPF JOHN,LENNIE PETER
Abstract
We recorded continuously, with high precision, the positions
of the eyes in anesthetized macaque monkeys prepared for
physiological recording. Most recordings were made after the
infusion of muscle relaxant to immobilize the eyes; in some
cases we also were able to record eye position for periods before
the eyes were immobilized. In all monkeys, the eyes moved
continuously by as much as 0.5 deg over a 10-min sampling period.
The average distance moved was proportional to the square root
of the sampling period, as would be expected from a random walk.
The movements had three distinct components: slow drifts, and
two rhythms driven by the pulse and respiration. The rhythmic
movements occurred only under paralysis: they were not discernible
in measurements made before the infusion of muscle relaxant.
The movements of the eye in the paralyzed animal can have
substantial effects on the measured physiological characteristics
of neurons. For excursions in the midrange of those we observed,
a neuron's sensitivity to a spatial frequency of 10 cycle/deg
might be underestimated by as much as a factor of three, depending
on the method by which responses were averaged. We show how
the effects of eye-movements can be mitigated by appropriate
data analysis.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
15 articles.
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