Abstract
Reflexive saccades are driven by visual stimulation whereas voluntary saccades require volitional control. Behavioral and lesional studies suggest that there are two separate mechanisms involved in the generation of these two types of saccades. This study investigated differences in cerebral and cerebellar activation between reflexive and self-paced voluntary saccadic eye movements using functional magnetic resonance imaging. In two experiments (whole brain and cerebellum) using the same paradigm, differences in brain activations induced by reflexive and self-paced voluntary saccades were assessed. Direct comparison of the activation patterns showed that the frontal eye fields, parietal eye field, the motion-sensitive area (MT/V5), the precuneus (V6), and the angular and the cingulate gyri were more activated in reflexive saccades than in voluntary saccades. No significant difference in activation was found in the cerebellum. Our results suggest that the alleged separate mechanisms for saccadic control of reflexive and self-paced voluntary are mainly observed in cerebral rather than cerebellar areas.
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Introduction
Saccades are fast rotatory eye movements that serve to move the eyes as quickly as possible, so that an object of interest is projected onto the fovea where it can be visually processed in detail (Schall 1995; Hayakawa et al. 2002; Schiller and Tehovnik 2005; Amlot and Walker 2006). Saccades can be classified into two broad categories: reflexive and higher-order saccades. Reflexive saccades are saccades toward suddenly appearing targets and are described as reflexive or targeting saccades. Higher-order saccades have a more volitional nature and include voluntary, memory-guided and delayed saccades. Voluntary saccades are made with a cognitive judgment in order to determine when and where to move gaze (Straube and Deubel 1995; Leigh and Zee 1999; Walker et al. 2000).
The neurophysiological circuit that drives saccadic eye movements includes several distinct regions of the brain (Leigh and Zee 1999). The mesencephalic and the pontine reticular formations of the brainstem encode the motor signals that drive the eye muscles. The superior colliculus encodes the direction and amplitude of the saccadic eye movements (Leigh and Zee 1999). Several cortical brain areas, such as the frontal eye fields (FEF), the supplementary eye fields (SEF), the parietal eye fields (PEF), and the motion sensitive area (MT/V5), are also known to be involved in saccadic generation. Furthermore, the cerebellum is involved in maintaining saccadic accuracy (Leigh and Zee 1999). Specific areas of the human cerebellum, such as lobules VI and VII and the fastigial nucleus, have been implicated in maintaining saccadic accuracy (Zee et al. 1976; Straube and Deubel 1995). Patients with cerebellar lesions often show inaccurate saccades (known as saccadic dysmetria) that do not resolve over time (Straube and Deubel 1995).
Several functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) imaging studies have shown activation in the human cerebellum during saccadic eye movements (Desmurget et al. 1998; Dieterich et al. 2000; Hayakawa et al. 2002; Nitschke et al. 2004). For instance, Hayakawa et al. observed activity in the posterior vermis and the bilateral hemispheres of the cerebellum when subjects made saccades between two stationary targets (Hayakawa et al. 2002).
It has been suggested that there are two separate and largely independent mechanisms involved in the generation of reflexive saccades and voluntary saccades (Deubel 1995). Mort et al. aimed to compare the cortical activation patterns induced by these two types of saccades with fMRI (Mort et al. 2003). In their paradigm, reflexive saccades were evoked by flashing a peripheral spot to the left or the right of the fixation spot. Voluntary saccades were evoked by means of an arrow cue as an indicator to the observer to change their point of gaze to a dot pointed at by the arrow. Their results suggested that FEF and PEF were more activated during voluntary saccades and that the angular gyrus and the precuneus were more activated during reflexive saccades (Mort et al. 2003). Furthermore, behavioral studies showed that modification of the amplitudes of reflexive saccades in a saccade adaptation paradigm (McLaughlin 1967) does not influence the amplitudes of voluntary saccades, and vice versa (Erkelens and Hulleman 1993; Gaveau et al. 2005; Alahyane et al. 2007). The cerebellum is an important brain structure in saccadic gain control (Ron and Robinson 1973; Straube and Deubel 1995; Desmurget et al. 1998; Barash et al. 1999; Straube et al. 2001). Desmurget et al. (2000) demonstrated that the oculomotor vermis of the cerebellum is activated in a saccade adaptation paradigm. The results of the behavioral studies suggest that the cerebellum might also be involved in a different way in maintaining the accuracy of reflexive and voluntary saccades.
In the present study, fMRI was used to investigate putative differences in cerebral and cerebellar activation patterns between reflexive and self-paced voluntary saccadic eye movements. We performed two experiments using the same experimental paradigm. The first experiment aimed to assess cerebral activations of saccadic eye movements and to compare the results with data from existing literature. The second experiment focused on the cerebellum, specifically obtaining more detailed activation within this brain structure. We hypothesized that the differences between reflexive and self-paced voluntary saccadic eye movements might be reflected by differences in cerebral as well as in cerebellar activation patterns.
Materials and methods
Subjects
Written informed consent was obtained from each participant prior to the study, which was approved by the Institutional Review Board. Subjects could participate in either one or both of the two experiments that were performed: whole brain and cerebellum. A total of 26 healthy volunteers (13 men, 13 women; average age 26.7 years, range 22–37 years) participated in the whole brain experiment, and 26 healthy volunteers (15 men, 11 women; average age 26.7 years, range 22–37 years) participated in the cerebellum experiment. Ten of these subjects participated in both experiments. None of the subjects had any known neurological or visual defects other than minor refractive anomalies. None of the subjects wore spectacle correction during the experiments, as minor refractive anomalies could be adjusted for by the goggle system that was used to display the stimuli. All subjects reported good visual acuity during the experiment.
Data acquisition
For each subject the images were acquired on a 1.5T MRI scanner (Signa CV/I; General Electric, Milwaukee, USA) using a dedicated 8-channel head coil. For the anatomical image, a 3D high-resolution inversion recovery FSPGR T1-weighted sequence covering the entire brain was acquired (repetition time (TR)/echo time (TE)/inversion time (TI)/9.99/2/400 ms, flip angle 20°, 320 × 224 matrix with a rectangular field-of-view of 22 cm, 1.2 mm slice thickness with no gap; parallel imaging factor of 2). Acquisition time was 5 min.
Functional imaging
For functional imaging, a single-shot gradient-echo echo-planar imaging (EPI) sequence in transverse orientation was used in each study that is sensitive to blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) contrast. For the whole brain experiment, the imaging volume covered the entire brain (TR/TE 4,500/50 ms, 64 × 64 matrix with a rectangular field-of-view of 22 cm, 2.5 mm slice thickness, 48 contiguous slices; voxel size of 2.5 × 3.5 × 3.5 mm3). Acquisition time was 10:03 min per scanning session (including 18 s of dummy scans that were discarded). For the cerebellum experiment, the imaging volume only covered the whole cerebellum with higher spatial and temporal resolution (TR/TE 3,000/50 ms, 96 × 96 matrix with a rectangular field-of-view of 24 cm, 2.5 mm slice thickness, 18 contiguous slices; voxel size of 2.5 × 2.5 × 2.5 mm3). Acquisition time was 10:00 min per scanning session (including 12 s of dummy scans that were discarded).
Eye tracking
Eye movements (monocular, left eye) were registered continuously with the Real Eye RE-4601 Imaging System (Avotec Inc., Stuart, FA, USA) with a 60 Hz sampling rate. Online monitoring of eye movements and recording was done with the iViewX Eye Tracking System (SensoMotoric Instruments, Teltow, Germany). The system was calibrated before each scan session with the built-in 3-by-3 point calibration routine.
Stimulus paradigm
The experiments were performed in near darkness. The visual stimuli were binocularly presented by means of a goggle-based system (Silent Vision SV-7021 Fiber Optic Visual System; Avotec Inc.). The optical components were mounted on top of the head coil. Screen resolution was 1,024 × 768 pixels and the refresh rate was 60 Hz.
The visual stimulation was exactly the same for both experiments (whole brain and cerebellum), and consisted of three different visual displays, corresponding to three experimental conditions. In all three displays, three horizontally aligned dots (0.9° of visual angle in diameter) were presented on a dark background. The horizontal separation between the dots was 9°, and the central dot was centered in the subject’s visual field-of-view. The overall luminance was 0.43 cd/m2.
In the fixation condition (baseline), the central dot was yellow, and the two peripheral dots were gray. Subjects were instructed to look at the yellow dot continuously. In the first active condition (reflexive saccades), the central dot and one of the peripheral dots were gray, and the other one was yellow. The two peripheral dots were intermittently yellow with a random interval between 1 and 2 s. In this condition saccade pace was therefore imposed by the other peripheral dot turning yellow.
In the second active condition (voluntary saccades), the central dot was gray, and both peripheral dots were yellow. Subjects were instructed to change their point of gaze between the two dots about every second, thus performing self-paced voluntary saccadic eye movements.
Task design
An experiment consisted of a block design in which the baseline condition [fixation (F)] and one of the two active conditions [reflexive (R) saccades and voluntary (V) saccades] were presented in alternation. The sequence of conditions started and ended with the baseline condition. The order of the two active conditions was switched halfway through the experiment [F–R–F–V…F–R–F–V–F–(switch)–V–F–R…F–V–F–R-F].
In the whole brain experiment, an active condition lasted for 31.5 s during which seven volumes were acquired. The baseline (fixation) condition lasted either 13.5 s (six times) or 18 s (seven times) during which three or four volumes, respectively, were acquired. Each of the two active conditions was presented six times and the baseline condition was presented 13 times in total. In the cerebellum experiment, each active condition lasted for 24 s during which time eight volumes were acquired. The baseline condition lasted for 12 s during which four volumes were acquired. Each of the two active conditions was presented eight times and the baseline condition was presented 17 times.
Analysis
Eye movements
The eye movement recordings were analyzed offline. Saccadic eye movements were extracted semi-automatically using an eye velocity criterion of 30°/s and checked manually. The total number of saccades was counted, and the average number of saccades per second was calculated for each subject, for each of the three conditions and for each of the two experiments. Paired t tests were used to assess differences between the conditions for significance.
Subjects were excluded from the analyses if they showed inadequate eye movement behavior, such as not looking at the yellow dot continuously or making more than one saccade per second in the voluntary condition. Subjects, in whom eye tracking failed due to technical problems, were also excluded.
Functional imaging data
The functional imaging data were analyzed using statistical parametric mapping software (SPM 2, distributed by the Wellcome Department of Cognitive Neurology, University College London, UK) implemented in MATLAB (Version 6.5, Mathworks, Sherborn, MA, USA). For both studies, motion correction and co-registration were done according to the methodology provided by SPM2 (Tzourio-Mazoyer et al. 2002). The time-series of images were realigned using a least square approach and a six parameter spatial transformation. The central image in the time-series was the reference to which all subsequent images were realigned (Friston et al. 1995). Motion parameters were checked for each subject to ascertain that no excessive motion (>3 mm translation or >1.5° rotation) has occurred. None of the scan sessions had to be discarded due to excessive motion.
Brain volumes were normalized to the standard space defined by the Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) template. The normalized data had a resolution of 2 × 2 × 2 mm3 and were spatially smoothed with a 3D isotropic Gaussian kernel, with a full width half maximum of 8 mm for the whole brain experiment and 6 mm for the cerebellum experiment.
Statistical parametric maps were calculated for each subject. Movement parameters resulting from the realignment pre-processing were included as regressors of no interest to further reduce motion artifacts. The model was estimated with a high-pass filter with a cut-off period of 128 s. For each subject and for each experiment, t-contrast maps were calculated between each of the two active condition and the baseline condition [(activereflexive > baseline) and (activevoluntary > baseline)] and between the two active conditions.
The individual t-contrast maps were used for second level random effects (group) analysis. One sample t tests were performed for each of the conditions and each of the experiments separately: (activereflexive > baseline) and (activevoluntary > baseline). To investigate the differences in brain activation between the reflexive and the voluntary saccade conditions directly we used an analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) in which we compared activereflexive versus activevoluntary and vice versa. In order to ensure that the differences in brain activation between these two active conditions are not caused by differences in the number of saccades made during the active condition, for each subject we counted the numbers of saccades made in the active conditions of the behavioral experiments (N reflexive and N voluntary). From these numbers we obtained the ratio [(N reflexive − N voluntary)/(N reflexive + N voluntary)] for each active condition, which was entered as a regressor of no interest. All tests were thresholded at P < 0.05 with false discovery rate (FDR) correction for multiple comparisons and at a minimum cluster size of 10 voxels.
Reporting of activation is focused on the brain areas that are involved in saccadic eye movements, namely the FEF, SEF, PEF, MT/V5, precuneus (V6), cingular and angular gyri, PVA/V1 and the cerebellum. In the whole brain experiment we focused on cerebral activations, whereas the cerebellum study allowed for a more detailed assessment of cerebellar activation.
Results
Eye movements
Inspection of the eye movement behavioral data showed that eye tracking failed in four subjects and that 12 subjects did not perform properly during the experiments (seven subjects in the whole brain experiment, and five subjects in the cerebellum experiment): four subjects made too many saccades in the voluntary conditions and eight subjects did not look at the yellow dot continuously. These 16 subjects were excluded from further analyses leaving 18 subjects for each of the two experiments; nine of these subjects participated in both experiments.
For the whole brain experiment, the average (±SD) number of saccades per second was 0.11 ± 0.04 for the fixation condition, 0.71 ± 0.05 for the reflexive condition and 0.81 ± 0.15 for the voluntary condition. For the cerebellum experiment, the average (±SD) number of saccades per second was 0.09 ± 0.05 for the fixation condition, 0.70 ± 0.07 for the reflexive condition and 0.72 ± 0.09 for the voluntary condition.
As expected, the number of saccades per second was significantly higher in each of the active conditions than in the baseline condition for both the whole brain experiment and the cerebellum experiment. For the whole brain experiment, the number of saccades per second made in the voluntary condition was higher than in the reflexive condition (P = 0.012). In the cerebellum experiment subjects made an equal number of saccades in both active conditions (P = 0.55). In both experiments, the average number of saccades per second made in the reflexive condition matched the number of target onsets (0.7 per second). None of the subjects made saccades toward the target before it turned yellow in the reflexive condition.
fMRI activation
The results of the random effects group analysis for the whole brain experiment and for the cerebellum experiment are shown in Tables 1 and 2. In the cerebellum experiment no significant activation was found at a threshold of P < 0.05 with FDR correction. Therefore, we used a more lenient statistical threshold of P < 0.05 corrected for multiple comparisons at cluster level and with a minimum cluster size of 10 voxels.
Reflexive saccades
Analysis of the reflexive saccade condition for the whole brain experiment revealed bilateral activation in the precentral gyrus (frontal eye fields, FEF), in the superior parietal gyrus (parietal eye fields, PEF) and in the middle temporal gyrus (MT/V5) (Fig. 1). Unilateral activation was found in the left angular gyrus.
The cerebellum experiment revealed bilateral activation in lobule VI and unilaterally in crus I on the left (Fig. 2). Activity was also found in vermis VI and VII.
Voluntary saccades
Analysis of the voluntary saccade condition for the whole brain experiment revealed bilateral activation in the precentral gyrus (FEF) and unilateral activation in the left inferior parietal gyrus (PEF) (Fig. 3).
The cerebellum experiment revealed only unilateral activation in the right lobule VI (Fig. 4). Activity was also found in vermis VI and VII.
Direct comparison between reflexive and voluntary saccades
Results of the direct comparison between the two active (saccade) conditions are given in Table 3, and visualized in Fig. 5. When the reflexive saccade condition was compared with the voluntary saccade condition (activereflexive > activevoluntary) for the whole brain experiment, the analysis yielded bilateral activation in the precentral gyrus (FEF), in the inferior and superior parietal gyrus (PEF), in the middle temporal gyrus (MT/V5), the precuneus (V6), and the angular and the anterior cingulate gyrus, and unilateral right activation in the posterior cingulate gyrus.
When the reflexive saccade condition was compared with the voluntary saccade condition (activereflexive > activevoluntary) in the cerebellum experiment, the analysis yielded unilateral activation in the left lobule VI. This area of activation, however, was part of the large activation cluster in the fusiform gyrus, similar to that observed in the whole brain experiment. The actual part of this larger cluster being located in the left cerebellar lobule VI was less than 10 voxels.
For both the whole brain and the cerebellum experiment, no significant activation was found when the voluntary saccade condition was compared with the reflexive saccade condition.
A summary of the results is presented in Table 4.
Discussion
This study investigated differences in brain activation patterns between reflexive and voluntary saccadic eye movements. These two types of saccades were compared in two different experiments in which we looked for cerebral activation and for specific activation in the cerebellum.
Numerous functional imaging studies have investigated brain activation related to reflexive or voluntary saccades separately. PET studies have shown activation during reflexive saccades in FEF (Anderson et al. 1994; Sweeney et al. 1996), PEF (Anderson et al. 1994), cerebellum, striate cortex and posterior temporal cortex (Sweeney et al. 1996). fMRI studies have also shown activation in FEF (Petit et al. 1997; Luna et al. 1998; Muri et al. 1998; Berman et al. 1999; Nobre et al. 2000), PEF (Luna et al. 1998; Muri et al. 1998; Berman et al. 1999; Nobre et al. 2000), and the cerebellum (Nobre et al. 2000), as well as in SEF (Luna et al. 1998; Berman et al. 1999), the precuneus (Berman et al. 1999), the cingulate gyrus (Berman et al. 1999; Nobre et al. 2000), MT/V5, PVA/V1 and the midbrain. In general, subjects in these studies were asked to execute saccadic eye movement towards suddenly appearing peripheral targets. In our study, we also found that reflexive saccades yielded activation in the FEF, PEF, MT/V5 and in the angular gyrus, as well as in the cerebellum, more specifically in the cerebellar lobule VI, crus I and in the vermis VI and VII.
For voluntary saccades, PET studies have shown activation in FEF (Fox et al. 1985; Petit et al. 1996; Law et al. 1998), SEF (Fox et al. 1985; Petit et al. 1996; Law et al. 1998), PEF (Petit et al. 1996), PVA/V1 (Fox et al. 1985), the anterior cingulate cortex (Paus et al. 1993), the precuneus (Petit et al. 1996), the midbrain and the cerebellar vermis (Petit et al. 1996; Law et al. 1998). fMRI studies have also shown activation in FEF (Darby et al. 1996; Corbetta et al. 1998), SEF (Darby et al. 1996), PEF, PVA/V1, and the posterior vermis of the cerebellum (Corbetta et al. 1998), as well as in V4. In general, subjects in these studies were asked to execute self-paced voluntary horizontal saccades. In our study, self-paced voluntary saccades yielded activation in the FEF and PEF only, while activation was also found in the cerebellar lobules VI and in the vermis VI and VII.
Taken together, the previous imaging studies suggest a considerable overlap in brain activation during both types of saccadic eye movements. However, direct comparison studies of the brain activation patterns induced by reflexive and voluntary saccades are scarce. So far, only one fMRI study has investigated differences in activation patterns between both types of saccades (Mort et al. 2003). In the latter study, voluntary saccades were evoked by the sudden onset of a central cue indicating the direction of the saccade that was to be made. Using more lenient statistical thresholds than used in our study, the authors reported that, relative to voluntary saccades, the precuneus and the angular gyri were more strongly activated during reflexive saccades and that, relative to reflexive saccades, FEF and PEF were more strongly activated during voluntary saccades (Mort et al. 2003). In our study it was found that, relative to self-paced voluntary saccades, the MT/V5, the precuneus, and angular and cingulate gyri were more strongly activated during reflexive saccades. Relative to reflexive saccades, we found no area of interest which was more activated during self-paced voluntary saccades. In the cerebellum we found no significant differences in activation patterns between reflexive and voluntary saccadic eye movements.
Frontal, supplemental and parietal eye fields (FEF, SEF, PEF)
Studies on FEF and SEF lesions in human patients and non-human primates suggest that both areas are either not dominantly involved in the generation of reflexive saccades or that damage can be compensated for on a behavioral level by other areas, such as the brainstem (Schiller et al. 1980; van der Steen et al. 1986; Lee and Tehovnik 1995; Sommer and Tehovnik 1997; Schiller and Chou 1998; Dias and Segraves 1999). However, lesions of the PEF in non-human primates (Lynch and McLaren 1989) and humans (Pierrot-Deseilligny 1991) considerably delay the onset of reflexive saccades, suggesting that the PEF might be more essential than the FEF or SEF for the adequate performance of reflexive saccades (Gaymard et al. 1998).
On the contrary, the contribution of FEF and PEF to voluntary saccades has not been extensively evaluated by lesion studies. Until now, the most studied form of voluntary saccades is the memory-guided saccades (Pierrot-Deseilligny 1991; Rivaud et al. 1994; Sommer and Tehovnik 1997). These studies suggest that unilateral FEF lesions in humans slow down the onset of contralesional memory-guided saccades. Similarly, comparable data on the contribution of PEF to voluntary saccades are scarce as well.
We found that PEF was more activated in reflexive than voluntary saccades, which is in accordance with the lesion studies (Lynch and McLaren 1989; Pierrot-Deseilligny et al. 1991; Gaymard et al. 1998). The PEF is thought to be involved in saccades in terms of visuospatial localization, attention and integration (Pierrot-Deseilligny 1991; Muri 2005). These cognitive processes are likely to be involved in a reflexive saccade condition. At each target onset, the brain needs to attend to it, localize the peripheral target and encode the appropriate spatial directions for the saccadic eye movement towards it (i.e. integration) (Matsuda et al. 2004). In the voluntary condition these processes may have a less prominent role, which might relate to the increased activation in PEF in the reflexive saccade condition.
We also found that the FEF was more activated during the generation of reflexive rather than voluntary saccades, which seems to be at odds with the physiological and functional studies mentioned above. However, it has been proposed that the FEF, which is related to the preparatory stage of saccadic responses, sends out intention and readiness signals to the superior colliculus (Connolly et al. 2002). Since in our paradigm subjects were aware that they were about to make reflexive saccades, the activation in the FEF could reflect such intention and readiness signals.
The increased activation in the FEF and PEF during the generation of reflexive compared to voluntary saccades is in contrast to an earlier study which found that FEF and PEF were more activated during voluntary saccades (Mort et al. 2003). In the latter study eye movement was not recorded during scanning and the number of saccades may not have matched the number of stimuli. In the present study, we recorded the in-scanner behavior and found that the number of saccades in the different active conditions was different. However, adding the number of saccades as a regressor in the fMRI analysis did not change the differences in the activation between reflexive and voluntary saccades. We did not observe any significant activation in the SEF during saccadic eye movements. Activation in the SEF related to reflexive or voluntary saccade eye movements has been reported by some (Fox et al. 1985; Darby et al. 1996; Petit et al. 1996; Law et al. 1998; Luna et al. 1998; Muri et al. 1998; Berman et al. 1999; Nobre et al. 2000), but not by others (Anderson et al. 1994; Mort et al. 2003).
Motion-sensitive area (MT/V5)
Neurons in the MT area of monkeys are specifically responsive to visual motion, selectively for both direction and speed, and have receptive field sizes of up to 25° in visual angle (Zeki 1974; Baker et al. 1981; Van Essen et al. 1981; Maunsell and Van Essen 1983; Felleman and Kaas 1984; Churchland and Lisberger 2001). Functional imaging studies in humans have shown that the human homologue, area MT/V5, is also highly responsive to visual motion stimuli (Zeki et al. 1991; Watson et al. 1993; Tootell et al. 1995). We found that MT/V5 was bilaterally more activated in the reflexive than in the voluntary saccade condition, although no real visual motion was present in either condition. This activation could be explained by a phenomenon known as apparent motion (Wertheimer 1912). When two stimuli at two different locations are turned on and off in alternation (as was the case in our reflexive condition), subjects often perceive this as one single stimulus moving between two locations, rather than two stimuli flashing in alternation at the two locations. This percept is absent when the two stimuli are presented simultaneously, as in our voluntary saccade condition. Such a stimulus, in which the apparent motion phenomenon occurs, evokes activation in the human MT/V5 region (Goebel et al. 1998) and in area MT of monkeys (Mikami 1991; Albright 1993), just like a true visual motion stimulus.
Precuneus, cingulate gyrus and angular gyrus
The present study demonstrated that the precuneus, the posterior and anterior cingulate and the angular gyri showed more activation during reflexive and voluntary saccades.
Studies in non-human primates suggest that the precuneus belongs to part of the neural network specialized for the processing of spatially-guided behavior (Selemon and Goldman-Rakic 1988). Functional imaging studies have shown that the precuneus is involved in reflexive saccadic eye movements (Berman et al. 1999) and is associated with shifts of spatial attention (Cavanna and Trimble 2006). The anterior cingulate gyrus is involved in target detection (Posner and Petersen 1990) and is activated during self-paced saccades (Paus et al. 1993; Petit et al. 1996; Sweeney et al. 1996) and during reflexive saccades (Berman et al. 1999; Mort et al. 2003). Neurons in the posterior cingulate cortex of primates fire instantly to assign the spatial coordinates after a saccade in which the eye position signals are provided and to permit monitoring of either eye or self motion (Olson et al. 1996). Functional studies have shown that the posterior cingulate cortex is involved in confirming the new target position during reflexive saccades (Mort et al. 2003). Lesion studies show that the main area facilitating the triggering of reflexive visually-guided saccades, but not the voluntary saccades (Cavanna and Trimble 2006), is located in the posterior parietal cortex, in or near the superior part of the angular gyrus (Pierrot-Deseilligny 1991; Pierrot-Deseilligny et al. 1991).
Cerebellar activation
The cerebellum plays an important role in the control rather than in the generation of saccadic eye movements. The vermis (VI and VII) are involved in controlling the accuracy and timing of saccades (Noda et al. 1990; Voogd and Barmack 2005).
Microstimulation of vermis VI and VII in the alert monkey induce and influence saccadic eye movements (Ron and Robinson 1973). The Purkinje cells of vermis VI and VII project to the caudal part of the fastigial nucleus, which projects to the vestibular nuclei and saccade-related brainstem nuclei (Noda et al. 1990). Electrophysiological experiments and clinical studies suggest that the vermis VI and VII are involved in the direction-selective control of saccade metrics and in saccadic adaptation (Kase et al. 1980; Suzuki and Keller 1988; Fuchs et al. 1993). Disrupting the posterior vermis, especially area VI, VII and paravermis, in humans using transcranial magnetic stimulation also suggest that these areas are related to the execution of visually-guided saccades (Hashimoto and Ohtsuka 1995). Lesioning the oculomotor vermis in monkeys leads to a clear shortening of saccades (saccadic hypometria), an increase in saccadic amplitude variability and loss of adaptive capability of saccadic amplitudes (Takagi et al. 1998; Barash et al. 1999). Although hypometria dissolves within a year, saccadic amplitudes remain highly variable (Barash et al. 1999). Saccadic behavior of patients with lesions of the vermis VI and VII suggest that there is a dissociation between the extent of saccadic variability and the lack of adaptive capability (Straube et al. 2001). Indeed, an increased variability in saccadic accuracy does not generally lead to diminished saccadic adaptation (van der Geest et al. 2006). Lesions of the vermis VI and VII and the posterior hemispheres do not only affect saccadic accuracy, but may also delay the covert orientation of visuospatial attention (Townsend et al. 1999).
Several fMRI studies have reported activation of the cerebellum during saccadic eye movements. The cerebellar hemispheres were bilaterally activated during both voluntary (Dieterich et al. 2000) and reflexive saccades (Hayakawa et al. 2002). Activation in vermis VI and VII was observed in reflexive saccades (Hayakawa et al. 2002; Nitschke et al. 2004). Dieterich et al. proposed that vermis IX and lobules IV and V, as well as a small portion of vermis VIII, might be involved in oculomotor performance and the activation of the cerebellar hemispheres could possibly reflect visuospatial attention processes (Dieterich et al. 2000). Nitschke et al. suggested that the vermis VI and VII of the cerebellum play a predominant role in the control of visually-triggered saccadic eye movements, and are involved in processing visuospatial working memory and attention (Nitschke et al. 2004).
In accordance with these previous studies, we also found activation in cerebellar lobule VI and vermis VI and VII, for both types of saccades. However, when we compared the two types of saccades directly, no significant difference in activation was found. So, although the cerebellum is thought to be critically involved in saccade amplitude modifications in humans (Desmurget et al. 1998; Straube et al. 2001), the lack of transfer between the adaptation of reflexive and voluntary saccades as observed in behavioral studies (Erkelens and Hulleman 1993; Gaveau et al. 2005; Alahyane et al. 2007) is not reflected by differences in cerebellar activation between the two types of saccades. There are two possible, and not mutually exclusive, explanations for the lack of differential activation. It is possible that the modification of amplitudes of the two types of saccades is processed by different sets of neurons within the same cerebellar regions. Alternatively or additionally, the lack of transfer between voluntary and reflexive saccade adaptation arises on a cerebral level.
In the present experiments, voluntary saccades were self-paced saccades made between two targets. The present paradigm was chosen to mimic the saccadic adaptation experiments in which voluntary and reflexive saccades were dissociated with respect to their amplitude modifications. However, compared to other voluntary eye movement tasks (such as antisaccades and memory-guided saccades), the present task does not engage cognitive processes of inhibitory control and working memory which would recruit frontal areas. Hence, the lack of findings in these regions is not entirely unexpected. Moreover, subjects are able to actively suppress a reflexive saccade using cognitive processes of inhibition. It can be argued that the presently observed differences in circuitry between voluntary and reflexive saccades are mainly related to a self-paced mechanism which is, in our view, still volitional in nature.
Conclusion
The execution of reflexive saccades induced stronger activation in several cerebral areas, but not in the cerebellum, than the execution of self-paced voluntary saccades. This could indicate that functional difference in maintaining the accuracy of the two types of saccades is mediated on a cerebral level, or that it involves overlapping cerebellar regions with possible functional differences.
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The authors thank Dr. Tom Ruigrok for his assistance in anatomical localization of cerebellar fMRI activation.
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C. K. L. Schraa-Tam and P. van Broekhoven contributed equally to this study.
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Schraa-Tam, C.K.L., van Broekhoven, P., van der Geest, J.N. et al. Cortical and cerebellar activation induced by reflexive and voluntary saccades. Exp Brain Res 192, 175–187 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-008-1569-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-008-1569-4