TitleA sensory source for motor variation.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsOsborne, LC, Lisberger, SG, Bialek, W
JournalNature
Volume437
Issue7057
Pagination412-6
Date Published2005 Sep 15
KeywordsAnimals, Brain, Discrimination Learning, Eye Movements, Fixation, Ocular, Macaca mulatta, Male, Models, Neurological, Pursuit, Smooth, Time Factors, Visual Perception
Abstract

Suppose that the variability in our movements is caused not by noise in the motor system itself, nor by fluctuations in our intentions or plans, but rather by errors in our sensory estimates of the external parameters that define the appropriate action. For tasks in which precision is at a premium, performance would be optimal if no noise were added in movement planning and execution: motor output would be as accurate as possible given the quality of sensory inputs. Here we use visually guided smooth-pursuit eye movements in primates as a testing ground for this notion of optimality. In response to repeated presentations of identical target motions, nearly 92% of the variance in eye trajectory can be accounted for as a consequence of errors in sensory estimates of the speed, direction and timing of target motion, plus a small background noise that is observed both during eye movements and during fixations. The magnitudes of the inferred sensory errors agree with the observed thresholds for sensory discrimination by perceptual systems, suggesting that the very different neural processes of perception and action are limited by the same sources of noise.

Alternate JournalNature