A circuit model for transsaccadic space updating and mislocalization

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Wang, Xiao; Tsien, Sophia J.; Jin, Min; Goldberg, Michael E.; Zhang, Mingsha; Qian, Ning
署名单位:
Beijing Normal University; Columbia University; Columbia University; Columbia University; Columbia University; Columbia University; Columbia University
刊物名称:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN/ISSBN:
0027-14060
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2422911122
发表日期:
2025-05-19
关键词:
frontal eye field visual space parietal cortex orientation position REPRESENTATION integration adaptation perception time
摘要:
We perceive a stable, continuous world despite drastic changes of retinal images across saccades. However, while persistent objects in daily life appear stable across saccades, stimuli flashed around saccades can be grossly mislocalized. We address this puzzle with our recently proposed circuit model for perisaccadic receptive-field (RF) remapping in the lateral interparietal area (LIP) and frontal eye fields (FEF). The model uses center-excitation/surround-inhibition connections to store a relevant stimulus' retinal location in memory as a population activity. This activity profile is updated across each saccade by directional connections gated by the corollary discharge (CD) of the saccade command. The updating is a continuous backward (against the saccade) shift of the population activity (equivalent to continuous forward remapping of the RFs), whose cumulative effect across the saccade is a subtraction of the saccade vector. The model that correctly updates persistent stimuli, and flashes well before and after saccades, produces the observed forward and backward translational mislocalization for flashes around the saccade onset and offset, respectively, because of insufficient and unnecessary cumulative updating after the saccade, caused by visual response latency and sluggish CD time course. We confirm the model prediction that for perisaccadic RFs measured with flashes before the saccades, the forward remapping magnitudes across the saccades are smaller for later flashes. Our work suggests that transsaccadic perception is stable because the presaccadic retinal position of an object is updated to match the postsaccadic (reafferent) retinal position of the same object, and that the brain uses unaware decoders which do not distinguish between different origins of neurons' activities.