Vaziri S, Diedrichsen J, and Shadmehr R (2006) Why does the brain
predict sensory consequences of oculomotor commands? Optimal integration of the
predicted and the actual sensory feedback, Journal of Neuroscience, 26:4188-4197.
Abstract When the brain initiates a saccade,
it uses a copy of the oculomotor commands to predict the visual consequences:
For example, if one fixates a reach target, a peripheral saccade will produce
an internal estimate of the new retinal location of the target, a process
called remapping. In natural settings, the target likely remains visible after
the saccade. So why should the brain predict the sensory consequence of the
saccade when after its completion, the image of the target remains visible? We
hypothesized that in the post-saccadic period, the brain integrates target
position information from two sources: one based on remapping, and another
based on the peripheral view of the target. The integration of information from
these two sources could produce a less variable target estimate than is
possible from either source alone. Here we show that reaching towards targets
that were initially foveated and then remapped had significantly less variance
than reaches relying on peripheral target information. Furthermore, in a more
natural setting where both sources of information were available
simultaneously, variance of the reaches was further reduced as predicted by
integration. This integration occurred in a statistically optimal manner, as
demonstrated by the change in integration weights when we manipulated the
uncertainty of the post-saccadic target estimate by varying exposure time.
Therefore, the brain predicts the sensory consequences of motor commands
because it integrates its prediction with the actual sensory information to produce
an estimate of sensory space that is better than possible from either source
alone.
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