Scientific Reports (Dec 2023)

Orchestration of saccadic eye-movements by brain rhythms in macaque Frontal Eye Field

  • Yeganeh Shaverdi,
  • Seyed Kamaledin Setarehdan,
  • Stefan Treue,
  • Moein Esghaei

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-49346-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Visual perception has been suggested to operate on temporal ‘chunks’ of sensory input, rather than on a continuous stream of visual information. Saccadic eye movements impose a natural rhythm on the sensory input, as periods of steady fixation between these rapid eye movements provide distinct temporal segments of information. Ideally, the timing of saccades should be precisely locked to the brain’s rhythms of information processing. Here, we investigated such locking of saccades to rhythmic neural activity in rhesus monkeys performing a visual foraging task. We found that saccades are phase-locked to local field potential oscillations (especially, 9–22 Hz) in the Frontal Eye Field, with the phase of oscillations predictive of the saccade onset as early as 100 ms prior to these movements. Our data also indicate a functional role of this phase-locking in determining the direction of saccades. These findings show a tight—and likely important—link between oscillatory brain activity and rhythmic behavior that imposes a rhythmic temporal structure on sensory input, such as saccadic eye movements.