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. 1975 Jul;249(1):87–102. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.1975.sp011004

Depression in the excitability of relay cells of lateral geniculate nucleus following saccadic eye movements in the cat.

H Noda
PMCID: PMC1309559  PMID: 168363

Abstract

1. The excitability of relay cells of the lateral geniculate nucleus during a saccadic eye movement was studied in alert cats. Excitability was assessed by the firing probability of the cells in response to electrical stimulation of the optic chiasm. Modifications in the excitability were evaluated during the period following eye movements, by triggering a stimulator from potential shifts in electro-oculogram and altering delays in the stimulus pulse. 2. The cells were classified into S and T cells, based on their response properties and the latencies to chiasmatic stimulation. With a saccade in a stationary patterned field, T cells showed a burst discharge, while the discharges of S cells were completely suppressed. 3. The excitability was depressed in both S and T cells for 150-200 msec after a saccade, when the eye movement occurred in light. However, the depression did not occur in complete darkness. 4. The depression occurred also in the absence of eye movement, when the patterned visual field was moved in a saccadic fashion. 5. The depression in S cells occurred during an inhibitory period. Since S cells do not receive signals on image movement directly from the retina, the depression was due to a recurrent inhibition by signals transferred through the T ganglion-relay cell channel. 6. The depression in T cells occurred concomitantly with the burst discharge. Since the recurrent inhibition was operating less effectively during the period, the depression may be due to a phasic occlusion of the test impulse by coincident high-rate firings in the same cell. 7. The impairment in transmission of visual information through the lateral geniculate nucleus during the period following eye movements has been discussed in connexion with a neurophysiological basis for saccadic suppression.

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Selected References

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