Active vision at the foveal scale in the primate superior colliculus

Author:

Hafed Ziad M.12ORCID,Chen Chih-Yang3,Tian Xiaoguang4,Baumann Matthias P.12,Zhang Tong12

Affiliation:

1. Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience, Tübingen University, Tübingen, Germany

2. Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research, Tübingen University, Tübingen, Germany

3. Institute for the Advanced Study of Human Biology (WPI-ASHBi), Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan

4. University of Pittsburgh Brain Institute, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Abstract

The primate superior colliculus (SC) has recently been shown to possess both a large foveal representation as well as a varied visual processing repertoire. This structure is also known to contribute to eye movement generation. Here, we describe our current understanding of how SC visual and movement-related signals interact within the realm of small eye movements associated with the foveal scale of visuomotor behavior. Within the SC’s foveal representation, there is a full spectrum of visual, visual-motor, and motor-related discharge for fixational eye movements. Moreover, a substantial number of neurons only emit movement-related discharge when microsaccades are visually guided, but not when similar movements are generated toward a blank. This represents a particularly striking example of integrating vision and action at the foveal scale. Beyond that, SC visual responses themselves are strongly modulated, and in multiple ways, by the occurrence of small eye movements. Intriguingly, this impact can extend to eccentricities well beyond the fovea, causing both sensitivity enhancement and suppression in the periphery. Because of large foveal magnification of neural tissue, such long-range eccentricity effects are neurally warped into smaller differences in anatomical space, providing a structural means for linking peripheral and foveal visual modulations around fixational eye movements. Finally, even the retinal-image visual flows associated with tiny fixational eye movements are signaled fairly faithfully by peripheral SC neurons with relatively large receptive fields. These results demonstrate how studying active vision at the foveal scale represents an opportunity for understanding primate vision during natural behaviors involving ever-present foveating eye movements.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

MEXT | Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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