Capture of fixation by rotational flow; a deterministic hypothesis regarding scaling and stochasticity in fixational eye movements

Visual scan paths exhibit complex, stochastic dynamics. Even during visual fixation, the eye is in constant motion. Fixational drift and tremor are thought to reflect fluctuations in the persistent neural activity of neural integrators in the oculomotor brainstem, which integrate sequences of transi...

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Main Authors: Nicholas Mansel Wilkinson, Giorgio eMetta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2014.00029/full
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spelling doaj-2b5f78a8243c473cbd316fb177bc80d12020-11-25T01:07:45ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience1662-51372014-02-01810.3389/fnsys.2014.0002977941Capture of fixation by rotational flow; a deterministic hypothesis regarding scaling and stochasticity in fixational eye movementsNicholas Mansel Wilkinson0Giorgio eMetta1Giorgio eMetta2Istituto Italiano di TecnologiaIstituto Italiano di TecnologiaUniversity of PlymouthVisual scan paths exhibit complex, stochastic dynamics. Even during visual fixation, the eye is in constant motion. Fixational drift and tremor are thought to reflect fluctuations in the persistent neural activity of neural integrators in the oculomotor brainstem, which integrate sequences of transient saccadic velocity signals into a short term memory of eye position. Despite intensive research and much progress, the precise mechanisms by which oculomotor posture is maintained remain elusive. Drift exhibits a stochastic statistical profile which has been modelled using random walk formalisms. Tremor is widely dismissed as noise. Here we focus on the dynamical profile of fixational tremor, and argue that tremor may be a signal which usefully reflects the workings of the oculomotor postural control. We identify signatures reminiscent of a certain flavour of transient neurodynamics; toric travelling waves which rotate around a central phase singularity. Spiral waves play an organisational role in dynamical systems at many scales throughout nature, though their potential functional role in brain activity remains a matter of educated speculation. Spiral waves have a repertoire of functionally interesting dynamical properties, including persistence, which suggest that they could in theory contribute to persistent neural activity in the oculomotor postural control system. Whilst speculative, the singularity hypothesis of oculomotor postural control implies testable predictions, and could provide the beginnings of an integrated dynamical framework for eye movements across scales.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2014.00029/fullTremortraveling wavesNeurodynamicsactive visionspiral waveneural integrator
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicholas Mansel Wilkinson
Giorgio eMetta
Giorgio eMetta
spellingShingle Nicholas Mansel Wilkinson
Giorgio eMetta
Giorgio eMetta
Capture of fixation by rotational flow; a deterministic hypothesis regarding scaling and stochasticity in fixational eye movements
Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
Tremor
traveling waves
Neurodynamics
active vision
spiral wave
neural integrator
author_facet Nicholas Mansel Wilkinson
Giorgio eMetta
Giorgio eMetta
author_sort Nicholas Mansel Wilkinson
title Capture of fixation by rotational flow; a deterministic hypothesis regarding scaling and stochasticity in fixational eye movements
title_short Capture of fixation by rotational flow; a deterministic hypothesis regarding scaling and stochasticity in fixational eye movements
title_full Capture of fixation by rotational flow; a deterministic hypothesis regarding scaling and stochasticity in fixational eye movements
title_fullStr Capture of fixation by rotational flow; a deterministic hypothesis regarding scaling and stochasticity in fixational eye movements
title_full_unstemmed Capture of fixation by rotational flow; a deterministic hypothesis regarding scaling and stochasticity in fixational eye movements
title_sort capture of fixation by rotational flow; a deterministic hypothesis regarding scaling and stochasticity in fixational eye movements
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
issn 1662-5137
publishDate 2014-02-01
description Visual scan paths exhibit complex, stochastic dynamics. Even during visual fixation, the eye is in constant motion. Fixational drift and tremor are thought to reflect fluctuations in the persistent neural activity of neural integrators in the oculomotor brainstem, which integrate sequences of transient saccadic velocity signals into a short term memory of eye position. Despite intensive research and much progress, the precise mechanisms by which oculomotor posture is maintained remain elusive. Drift exhibits a stochastic statistical profile which has been modelled using random walk formalisms. Tremor is widely dismissed as noise. Here we focus on the dynamical profile of fixational tremor, and argue that tremor may be a signal which usefully reflects the workings of the oculomotor postural control. We identify signatures reminiscent of a certain flavour of transient neurodynamics; toric travelling waves which rotate around a central phase singularity. Spiral waves play an organisational role in dynamical systems at many scales throughout nature, though their potential functional role in brain activity remains a matter of educated speculation. Spiral waves have a repertoire of functionally interesting dynamical properties, including persistence, which suggest that they could in theory contribute to persistent neural activity in the oculomotor postural control system. Whilst speculative, the singularity hypothesis of oculomotor postural control implies testable predictions, and could provide the beginnings of an integrated dynamical framework for eye movements across scales.
topic Tremor
traveling waves
Neurodynamics
active vision
spiral wave
neural integrator
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2014.00029/full
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