上丘的深层。

Reviews of oculomotor research Pub Date : 1989-01-01
D L Sparks, R Hartwich-Young
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引用次数: 0

摘要

有令人信服的证据表明,SC的深层参与将感觉信号转化为控制眼球跳动的运动指令。深层接收来自大脑区域的输入,这些区域参与分析刺激(视觉、听觉和体感),用于指导定向运动。从丘神经元记录的活动模式适合于眼跳的起始和方向,携带这些信号的神经元按地形组织,形成运动(眼跳)空间的地图。深层的传出投射到与支配眼外肌的运动神经元池有直接或间接联系的脑干核。最后,深层丘神经元的可逆失活严重损害了动物产生准确扫视的能力。我们对SC的解剖和功能组织的知识仍然存在重大差距。通过传入通路传递给SC的生理信号在很大程度上是未知的。人们对SC的内在组织知之甚少;至于神经元之间在浅层和深层分裂中是否有广泛的交流,这个问题还没有得到解决。对主要传出通路起源细胞的形态、位置或生理反应特性了解甚少;而解码有关扫视的方向、速度和幅度的信息的神经回路(包含在丘细胞的神经活动的时空模式中)仍未明确。一般来说,深丘神经元的感觉反应对定向运动的启动的贡献是未知的。没有实验证据表明,对感觉刺激作出反应的深丘神经元的活动对于SC中观察到的运动信号的产生是必要的或充分的,并且SC中专门参与将感觉信号转化为运动命令的连接模式尚未确定。在麻醉或瘫痪的动物中,SC中听觉、体感和视觉地图的排列影响了对感觉运动整合过程的思考。通常认为,SC的深层划分包含了感觉空间的地形图。,动物周围空间中的一个点由位于SC中特定位置的神经元表示。进一步假设,来自空间中同一点的不同模式的感觉信号激活了位于该表征内的共同丘神经元池。(摘要删节为400字)
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The deep layers of the superior colliculus.

The evidence is compelling that the deep layers of the SC are involved in the translation of sensory signals into motor commands for the control of saccadic eye movements. The deep layers receive inputs from brain areas involved in the analysis of stimuli (visual, auditory and somatosensory) used to guide orienting movements. Patterns of activity recorded from collicular neurons are appropriate for the initiation and direction of saccades, and neurons carrying these signals are organized topographically, forming a map of motor (saccadic) space. Efferent projections from the deep layers are to brainstem nuclei having direct or indirect connections with motoneuron pools innervating extraocular muscles. Finally, reversible inactivation of neurons in the deep colliculus severely impairs the ability of animals to generate accurate saccades. Major gaps in our knowledge of the anatomical and functional organization of the SC remain. The physiological signals conveyed to the SC over afferent pathways are, for the most part, unknown. The intrinsic organization of the SC is poorly understood; and the question of whether or not there is extensive communication between neurons in the superficial and deep divisions has not yet been resolved. Very little is known about the morphology, location or physiological response properties of the cells of origin of the major efferent pathways; and the neural circuits involved in decoding information about the direction, velocity and amplitude of saccades (contained in the spatial and temporal pattern of neural activity of collicular cells) are still unspecified. In general, the contribution of the sensory responses of deep collicular neurons to the initiation of orienting movements is unknown. There is no experimental evidence that the activity of deep collicular neurons responsive to sensory stimuli is either necessary or sufficient for the generation of the motor signals observed in the SC, and patterns of connections within the SC specifically involved in the translation of sensory signals into motor commands have not been identified. The alignment (in anesthetized or paralysed animals) of auditory, somatosensory and visual maps in the SC has influenced thinking about the process of sensorimotor integration. It is commonly assumed that the deep division of the SC contains topographical maps of sensory space--i.e., a point in the space surrounding the animal is represented by neurons residing at a particular location in the SC. It is assumed, further, that sensory signals from different modalities originating from the same point in space activate a common pool of collicular neurons located within this representation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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