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Mechanisms of Saccadic Suppression in Primate Cortical Area V4.

Theodoros P ZanosPatrick J MineaultDaniel GuittonChristopher C Pack
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
We explore our surroundings by looking at things, but each eye movement that we make causes an abrupt shift of the visual input. Why doesn't the world look like a film recorded on a shaky camera? The answer in part is a brain mechanism called saccadic suppression, which reduces the responses of visual neurons around the time of each eye movement. Here we reveal several new properties of the underlying mechanisms. First, the suppression operates differently in the central and peripheral visual fields. Second, it appears to be controlled by oscillations in the local field potentials at frequencies traditionally associated with attention. These results suggest that saccadic suppression shares the brain circuits responsible for actively ignoring irrelevant stimuli.
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