| Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience | |
| Perisaccadic updating of visual representations and attentional states: Linking behavior and neurophysiology | |
| Alexandria C Marino1  James A Mazer2  | |
| [1] Yale University School of Medicine;Yale University; | |
| 关键词: Neurophysiology; Saccades; Visual Perception; visual attention; receptive fields; Visual psychophysics; | |
| DOI : 10.3389/fnsys.2016.00003 | |
| 来源: DOAJ | |
【 摘 要 】
During natural vision, saccadic eye movements lead to frequent retinal image changes that result in different neuronal subpopulations representing the same visual feature across fixations. Despite these potentially disruptive changes to the neural representation, our visual percept is remarkably stable. Visual receptive field remapping, characterized as an anticipatory shift in the position of a neuron’s spatial receptive field immediately before saccades, has been proposed as one possible neural substrate for visual stability. Many of the specific properties of remapping, e.g., the exact direction of remapping relative the saccade vector and the precise mechanisms by which remapping could instantiate stability, remain a matter of debate. Recent studies have also shown that visual attention, like perception itself, can be sustained across saccades, suggesting that the attentional control system can also compensate for eye movements. Classical remapping could have an attentional component, or there could be a distinct attentional analogue of visual remapping. At this time we do not yet fully understand how the stability of attentional representations relates to perisaccadic receptive field shifts. In this review we develop a vocabulary for discussing perisaccadic shifts in receptive field location and perisaccadic shifts of attentional focus, review and synthesize behavioral and neurophysiological studies of perisaccadic perception and perisaccadic attention, and identify open questions that remain to be experimentally addressed.
【 授权许可】
Unknown