| Donald C. Brien | Queen’s University |
| Brian D. Corneil | University of Western Ontario |
| Jillian H. Fecteau | Queen’s University |
| Andrew H. Bell | Queen’s University |
| Douglas P. Munoz | Queen’s University |
Systematic modulations of microsaccades have been observed in humans during covert orienting. We show here that monkeys are a suitable model for studying the neurophysiology
governing these modulations of microsaccades. Using various cue-target saccade tasks, we observed the effects of visual and auditory cues on microsaccades in monkeys. As in human studies, following visual cues there was an early bias in cue-congruent microsaccades followed by a later bias in cue-incongruent microsaccades. Following auditory cues there was a cue-incongruent bias in left cues only. In a separate experiment, we observed that brainstem omnipause neurons, which gate all saccades, also paused during microsaccade generation. Thus, we provide evidence that at least part of the same neurocircuitry governs both large saccades and microsaccades.
Received: August 24, 2009
Published: December 22, 2009
Brien, D. C., Corneil, B. D., Fecteau, J. H., Bell, A. H. & Munoz, D. P. (2009). The behavioural and neurophysiological modulation of microsaccades in monkeys. Journal of Eye Movement Research, 3(2):4, 1-12.
covert orienting
cue-target task
omnipause neurons
crossmodal attention
fixational eye movements
oculomotor control