Author:
Leszczynski Marcin,Bickel Stephan,Nentwich Maximilian,Russ Brian E.,Parra Lucas,Lakatos Peter,Mehta Ashesh,Schroeder Charles E.
Abstract
SummaryIn natural “active” vision, humans and other primates use eye movements (saccades) to sample bits of information from visual scenes. In this process, nonretinal signals linked to saccades shift visual cortical neurons to a high excitability state as each saccade ends. The extent of this saccadic modulation outside of the visual system is unknown. Here, we show that during natural viewing, saccades modulate excitability in numerous auditory cortical areas, with a pattern complementary to that seen in visual areas. Bi-directional functional connectivity patterns suggest that these effects may arise from regions involved in saccade generation. By using saccadic signals to yoke excitability states in auditory areas to those in visual areas, the brain can improve information processing in complex natural settings.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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