TY - JOUR
T1 - Human cortical areas activated in relation to vergence eye movements - A PET study
AU - Hasebe, H.
AU - Oyamada, H.
AU - Kinomura, S.
AU - Kawashima, R.
AU - Ouchi, Y.
AU - Nobezawa, S.
AU - Tsukada, H.
AU - Yoshikawa, E.
AU - Ukai, K.
AU - Takada, R.
AU - Takagi, M.
AU - Abe, H.
AU - Fukuda, H.
AU - Bando, T.
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by a grant from the Nissan Science Foundation and the Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture (10164218) to T.B. and JSPS-RFTF (97L00202) for R.K.
PY - 1999/8
Y1 - 1999/8
N2 - Human cortical areas activated in relation to vergence eye movements were determined using positron emission tomography. Binocular disparity- driven visual stimuli were presented using a head-mounted display. Eye movements were monitored continuously by an infrared limbus tracker. A combination of a bar and a cross was used as the target. In the vergence task, subjects were instructed to follow an approaching bar, while ignoring a stationary cross. Activation in relation to vergence eye movement was discriminated from activation in relation to motion vision by using the ignore-bar task as the control. In the ignore-bar task, subjects were instructed to fixate on a stationary cross, while ignoring an approaching bar. The fixation task was used as the basic control for both the vergence and the ignore-bar tasks. Areas of activation in relation to vergence eye movements were found in the bilateral temporooccipital junction, the left inferior parietal lobule, and the right fusiform gyrus by comparing regional cerebral flow between the vergence and ignore-bar tasks and by the conjunctive analyses of vergence-vs-ignore comparison with vergence-vs- fixation comparison.
AB - Human cortical areas activated in relation to vergence eye movements were determined using positron emission tomography. Binocular disparity- driven visual stimuli were presented using a head-mounted display. Eye movements were monitored continuously by an infrared limbus tracker. A combination of a bar and a cross was used as the target. In the vergence task, subjects were instructed to follow an approaching bar, while ignoring a stationary cross. Activation in relation to vergence eye movement was discriminated from activation in relation to motion vision by using the ignore-bar task as the control. In the ignore-bar task, subjects were instructed to fixate on a stationary cross, while ignoring an approaching bar. The fixation task was used as the basic control for both the vergence and the ignore-bar tasks. Areas of activation in relation to vergence eye movements were found in the bilateral temporooccipital junction, the left inferior parietal lobule, and the right fusiform gyrus by comparing regional cerebral flow between the vergence and ignore-bar tasks and by the conjunctive analyses of vergence-vs-ignore comparison with vergence-vs- fixation comparison.
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U2 - 10.1006/nimg.1999.0453
DO - 10.1006/nimg.1999.0453
M3 - Article
C2 - 10417252
AN - SCOPUS:0033178624
SN - 1053-8119
VL - 10
SP - 200
EP - 208
JO - NeuroImage
JF - NeuroImage
IS - 2
ER -