An Attention-Sensitive Memory Trace in Macaque MT Following Saccadic Eye Movements.

We experience a visually stable world despite frequent retinal image displacements induced by eye, head, and body movements. The neural mechanisms underlying this remain unclear. One mechanism that may contribute is transsaccadic remapping, in which the responses of some neurons in various attention...

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Main Authors: Tao Yao, Stefan Treue, B Suresh Krishna
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-02-01
Series:PLoS Biology
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4764326?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-b471c3285c624b84a2ed20d2766ada902021-07-02T14:41:38ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Biology1544-91731545-78852016-02-01142e100239010.1371/journal.pbio.1002390An Attention-Sensitive Memory Trace in Macaque MT Following Saccadic Eye Movements.Tao YaoStefan TreueB Suresh KrishnaWe experience a visually stable world despite frequent retinal image displacements induced by eye, head, and body movements. The neural mechanisms underlying this remain unclear. One mechanism that may contribute is transsaccadic remapping, in which the responses of some neurons in various attentional, oculomotor, and visual brain areas appear to anticipate the consequences of saccades. The functional role of transsaccadic remapping is actively debated, and many of its key properties remain unknown. Here, recording from two monkeys trained to make a saccade while directing attention to one of two spatial locations, we show that neurons in the middle temporal area (MT), a key locus in the motion-processing pathway of humans and macaques, show a form of transsaccadic remapping called a memory trace. The memory trace in MT neurons is enhanced by the allocation of top-down spatial attention. Our data provide the first demonstration, to our knowledge, of the influence of top-down attention on the memory trace anywhere in the brain. We find evidence only for a small and transient effect of motion direction on the memory trace (and in only one of two monkeys), arguing against a role for MT in the theoretically critical yet empirically contentious phenomenon of spatiotopic feature-comparison and adaptation transfer across saccades. Our data support the hypothesis that transsaccadic remapping represents the shift of attentional pointers in a retinotopic map, so that relevant locations can be tracked and rapidly processed across saccades. Our results resolve important issues concerning the perisaccadic representation of visual stimuli in the dorsal stream and demonstrate a significant role for top-down attention in modulating this representation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4764326?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tao Yao
Stefan Treue
B Suresh Krishna
spellingShingle Tao Yao
Stefan Treue
B Suresh Krishna
An Attention-Sensitive Memory Trace in Macaque MT Following Saccadic Eye Movements.
PLoS Biology
author_facet Tao Yao
Stefan Treue
B Suresh Krishna
author_sort Tao Yao
title An Attention-Sensitive Memory Trace in Macaque MT Following Saccadic Eye Movements.
title_short An Attention-Sensitive Memory Trace in Macaque MT Following Saccadic Eye Movements.
title_full An Attention-Sensitive Memory Trace in Macaque MT Following Saccadic Eye Movements.
title_fullStr An Attention-Sensitive Memory Trace in Macaque MT Following Saccadic Eye Movements.
title_full_unstemmed An Attention-Sensitive Memory Trace in Macaque MT Following Saccadic Eye Movements.
title_sort attention-sensitive memory trace in macaque mt following saccadic eye movements.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Biology
issn 1544-9173
1545-7885
publishDate 2016-02-01
description We experience a visually stable world despite frequent retinal image displacements induced by eye, head, and body movements. The neural mechanisms underlying this remain unclear. One mechanism that may contribute is transsaccadic remapping, in which the responses of some neurons in various attentional, oculomotor, and visual brain areas appear to anticipate the consequences of saccades. The functional role of transsaccadic remapping is actively debated, and many of its key properties remain unknown. Here, recording from two monkeys trained to make a saccade while directing attention to one of two spatial locations, we show that neurons in the middle temporal area (MT), a key locus in the motion-processing pathway of humans and macaques, show a form of transsaccadic remapping called a memory trace. The memory trace in MT neurons is enhanced by the allocation of top-down spatial attention. Our data provide the first demonstration, to our knowledge, of the influence of top-down attention on the memory trace anywhere in the brain. We find evidence only for a small and transient effect of motion direction on the memory trace (and in only one of two monkeys), arguing against a role for MT in the theoretically critical yet empirically contentious phenomenon of spatiotopic feature-comparison and adaptation transfer across saccades. Our data support the hypothesis that transsaccadic remapping represents the shift of attentional pointers in a retinotopic map, so that relevant locations can be tracked and rapidly processed across saccades. Our results resolve important issues concerning the perisaccadic representation of visual stimuli in the dorsal stream and demonstrate a significant role for top-down attention in modulating this representation.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4764326?pdf=render
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