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Gaze-dependent topography in human posterior parietal cortex

Connolly, Jason D.; Vuong, Quoc C.; Thiele, Alexander

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Authors

Jason D. Connolly

Quoc C. Vuong

Alexander Thiele



Abstract

The brain must convert retinal coordinates into those required for directing an effector. One prominent theory holds that, through a combination of visual and motor/proprioceptive information, head-/body-centered representations are computed within the posterior parietal cortex (PPC). An alternative theory, supported by recent visual and saccade functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) topographic mapping studies, suggests that PPC neurons provide a retinal/eye-centered coordinate system, in which the coding of a visual stimulus location and/or intended saccade endpoints should remain unaffected by changes in gaze position. To distinguish between a retinal/eye-centered and a head-/body-centered coordinate system, we measured how gaze direction affected the representation of visual space in the parietal cortex using fMRI. Subjects performed memory-guided saccades from a central starting point to locations “around the clock.” Starting points varied between left, central, and right gaze relative to the head-/body midline. We found that memory-guided saccadotopic maps throughout the PPC showed spatial reorganization with very subtle changes in starting gaze position, despite constant retinal input and eye movement metrics. Such a systematic shift is inconsistent with models arguing for a retinal/eye-centered coordinate system in the PPC, but it is consistent with head-/body-centered coordinate representations.

Citation

Connolly, J. D., Vuong, Q. C., & Thiele, A. (2015). Gaze-dependent topography in human posterior parietal cortex. Cerebral Cortex, 25(6), 1519-1526. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bht344

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 13, 2013
Online Publication Date Dec 18, 2013
Publication Date Jun 1, 2015
Deposit Date Nov 14, 2013
Publicly Available Date Jun 9, 2015
Journal Cerebral Cortex
Print ISSN 1047-3211
Electronic ISSN 1460-2199
Publisher Oxford University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 25
Issue 6
Pages 1519-1526
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bht344
Keywords Functional magnetic resonance imaging, Head-centered, Posterior parietal cortex, Spatial coordinate frames, Topographic mapping.

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