Saccade-related activity in monkey superior colliculus; II. Spread of
activity during saccades.
Munoz, Douglas P., Robert H. Wurtz.
Laboratory of Sensorimotor Research, National Eye Institute, Bethesda, MD
20892-4435, USA and MRC Group in Sensory-Motor Physiology, Department of
Physiology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6.
APStracts 2:0073N, 1995.
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
1. In the previous paper (Munoz and Wurtz 1995) we described two classes of
cells in the monkey superior colliculus (SC) that were related to saccade
generation, buildup cells and burst cells, that fell into two functional
sublayers within the intermediate layers of the SC. Fixation cells in the
rostral SC were deemed to be part of the buildup cell layer. The buildup cells
had several characteristics in common with cells in the cat described as
having a "hill of activity" moving across the SC (Munoz et al. 1991),
but the burst cells had no such characteristics. In this paper we further
investigate whether there is evidence for such a moving hill of activity in
the monkey by analyzing the spatial and temporal activity of cells across the
SC during the generation of visually-guided saccades. 2. We recorded the
activity of single cells while the monkey made saccades of different
amplitudes (0.5o to 60o). We recorded cells from locations extending from the
rostral to caudal SC in order to sample cells whose optimal amplitudes ranged
from small to large saccades. This allowed us to see any shift of activity
across the SC before, during, and after saccades. It also allowed us to
determine the fraction of the SC that was active during the successive phases
of saccade generation. 3. During active visual fixation, the fixation cells in
the rostral pole of the buildup layer showed an increased discharge rate. From
the population reconstruction, we estimate that the zone of active cells
spanned the most rostral 0.72 mm in each SC. -3- J658-4R Assuming the SC is 5
mm in length, about 15% of the cells lying along the horizontal meridian in
the buildup layer would be active during fixation. 4. At least 100 ms prior to
the initiation of a saccade, long-lead activity began to appear in the buildup
layer at the site on the SC motor map related to the next saccade. Fixation
activity in the rostral poles simultaneously began to diminish, but the cells
in the burst layer remained relatively silent. 5. Approximately 25 ms before
saccade onset the fixation cells ceased firing and both burst and buildup
cells began to burst. The active zone in the burst layer was estimated to be
about 1.4 mm in diameter, occupying roughly 28% of the SC along a line running
from the rostral pole through the center of the initially active zone. The
size of this active area among the burst cells was independent of saccade
amplitude. The size of the initially active zone in the buildup layer was
larger than in the burst layer and was dependent upon saccade amplitude; it
was larger for larger saccades. 6. During the saccade, all cells in the
buildup layer lying rostral to the initially active zone became active, and
their peak discharge occurred later in the saccade as the cells were located
more rostrally. Cells lying caudal to the initially active buildup cells were
not activated. During the saccade, activity in the burst cell layer collapsed,
but there was no shift in the locus of this activity in the SC. -4- J658-4R 7.
We interpret the sequential activation of the buildup cells during a saccade
as a spread of activity rostrally across the buildup layer of the SC. We saw
no evidence for a spread of activity in the burst layer. 8. These experiments
allow us to propose the following sequence of activity among the SC cells
during generation of a saccade. During fixation, activity is confined to the
fixation cells in the rostral SC, and we hypothesize that these cells suppress
saccades via inhibitory connections directly onto the saccade cells in the
caudal SC and excitatory connections onto the omnipause neurons in the pons.
The buildup cells show the earliest activity preceding a saccade, and we
suggest that this activity is related to preparation to make a saccade,
including selection of target amplitude and direction. The burst cells are
active just prior to saccade onset, and could provide input to the pons for
the amplitude and direction of the saccade. The pause in activity of the
fixation cells is critical for the timing of the saccade. We think that the
rostral spread of activity in the buildup cells, and the sharp reduction in
burst cell discharge is consistent with a feedback signal to the SC from the
pons. We conclude that these changes in the spatio- temporal distribution of
activity in the monkey SC are critical for controlling when a saccade occurs,
its amplitude and direction, and its trajectory.
Received 24 October 1994; accepted in final form 13 February 1995.
APS Manuscript Number J658-4.
Article publication pending J. Neurophysiol.
ISSN 1080-4757 Copyright 1995 The American Physiological Society.
Published in APStracts on 3 April 1995.