The Journal of Neuroscience, October 15, 1999, 19(20):9098-9106
The Spectral Main Sequence of Human Saccades
Mark R.
Harwood,
Laura E.
Mezey, and
Christopher M.
Harris
Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences Unit, Great Ormond
Street Hospital for Children NHS Trust and Institute of Child Health,
University College London, London WC1N 3JH, United Kingdom
Despite the many models of saccadic eye movements, little attention
has been paid to the shape of saccade trajectories. Some investigators
have argued that saccades are driven by a rectangular "bang-bang"
neural control signal, whereas others have emphasized the similarity to
fast arm movement trajectories, such as the "minimum jerk" profile.
However, models have not been tested rigorously against empirical
trajectories. We examined the Fourier transforms of saccades and
compared them with theoretical models. Horizontal saccades were
recorded from 10 healthy subjects. The Fourier transform of each
saccade was accurately computed using a padded fast Fourier transform
(FFT), and the frequencies of the first three minima (M1, M2, M3) in
each energy spectrum were measured to a precision of 0.12 Hz. Each
subject showed near-linear trends in the relationships among M1, M2,
and M3 and the reciprocal of duration (1/T), which we
call the "spectral main sequence." Extrapolation of plots did not
pass through the origin, indicating a subtle departure from self-similarity. Bivariate confidence regions were established to allow
for slope-intercept variability. The nonharmonic relationships seen
cannot arise from a rectangular saccadic pulse driving a linear ocular
plant. The relationships are also incompatible with minimum
acceleration, minimum jerk, or higher-order minimum square derivative
trajectories. The best fits were made by trajectories that minimize
postmovement variance with signal-dependent noise (Harris and Wolpert,
1998). It is concluded that the spectral main sequence is exquisitely
sensitive to the saccade trajectory and should be used to test
objectively all present and future models of saccades.
Key words:
saccadic eye movements; human; Fourier transform; saccade
trajectories; bang-bang control; minimum variance model
Copyright © 1999 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/99/19209098-09$05.00/0