scholarly journals Visual landmarks calibrate auditory space across eye movements

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Aagten-Murphy ◽  
Martin Szinte ◽  
Robert Taylor ◽  
Heiner Deubel

AbstractVisual objects that are present both before and after eye movements can act as landmarks, aiding localization of other visual stimuli. We investigated whether visual landmarks would also influence auditory localization – despite participants’ head position remaining unchanged. Participants made eye-movements from central fixation to a peripheral visual landmark, which either remained stationary or was covertly displaced. Following the movement, participants judged whether a stimulus (auditory or visual) was shifted in location relative to before the movement. Visual localization estimates shifted along with the landmark, although the landmark displacement itself went unnoticed. Interestingly, auditory localization estimates were also displaced. Thus, despite identical auditory input reaching the ears, two auditory stimuli originating from the same position were perceived as spatially distinct when the visual landmark moved. These results are consistent with the idea that auditory spatial information is encoded within an eye-centered reference frame and subject to spatial recalibration by visual landmarks.HighlightsVisual landmarks affect stimulus localization across eye movementsWe show this also for auditory stimuli, even when the head remains stableDue to a visual landmark displacement, identical auditory stimuli are perceived as shiftedThis suggests that auditory space is calibrated on eye-centered maps across saccades

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Talora L. Martin ◽  
Jordan Murray ◽  
Kiran Garg ◽  
Charles Gallagher ◽  
Aasef G. Shaikh ◽  
...  

AbstractWe evaluated the effects of strabismus repair on fixational eye movements (FEMs) and stereopsis recovery in patients with fusion maldevelopment nystagmus (FMN) and patients without nystagmus. Twenty-one patients with strabismus, twelve with FMN and nine without nystagmus, were tested before and after strabismus repair. Eye-movements were recorded during a gaze-holding task under monocular viewing conditions. Fast (fixational saccades and quick phases of nystagmus) and slow (inter-saccadic drifts and slow phases of nystagmus) FEMs and bivariate contour ellipse area (BCEA) were analyzed in the viewing and non-viewing eye. Strabismus repair improved the angle of strabismus in subjects with and without FMN, however patients without nystagmus were more likely to have improvement in stereoacuity. The fixational saccade amplitudes and intersaccadic drift velocities in both eyes decreased after strabismus repair in subjects without nystagmus. The slow phase velocities were higher in patients with FMN compared to inter-saccadic drifts in patients without nystagmus. There was no change in the BCEA after surgery in either group. In patients without nystagmus, the improvement of the binocular function (stereopsis), as well as decreased fixational saccade amplitude and intersaccadic drift velocity, could be due, at least partially, to central adaptive mechanisms rendered possible by surgical realignment of the eyes. The absence of improvement in patients with FMN post strabismus repair likely suggests the lack of such adaptive mechanisms in patients with early onset infantile strabismus. Assessment of fixation eye movement characteristics can be a useful tool to predict functional improvement post strabismus repair.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Wager ◽  
◽  
Sabine Kleinert

Abstract Background Inaccurate, false or incomplete research publications may mislead readers including researchers and decision-makers. It is therefore important that such problems are identified and rectified promptly. This usually involves collaboration between the research institutions and academic journals involved, but these interactions can be problematic. Methods These recommendations were developed following discussions at World Conferences on Research Integrity in 2013 and 2017, and at a specially convened 3-day workshop in 2016 involving participants from 7 countries with expertise in publication ethics and research integrity. The recommendations aim to address issues surrounding cooperation and liaison between institutions (e.g. universities) and journals about possible and actual problems with the integrity of reported research arising before and after publication. Results The main recommendations are that research institutions should: develop mechanisms for assessing the integrity of reported research (if concerns are raised) that are distinct from processes to determine whether individual researchers have committed misconduct; release relevant sections of reports of research integrity or misconduct investigations to all journals that have published research that was investigated; take responsibility for research performed under their auspices regardless of whether the researcher still works at that institution or how long ago the work was done; work with funders to ensure essential research data is retained for at least 10 years. Journals should: respond to institutions about research integrity cases in a timely manner; have criteria for determining whether, and what type of, information and evidence relating to the integrity of research reports should be passed on to institutions; pass on research integrity concerns to institutions, regardless of whether they intend to accept the work for publication; retain peer review records for at least 10 years to enable the investigation of peer review manipulation or other inappropriate behaviour by authors or reviewers. Conclusions Various difficulties can prevent effective cooperation between academic journals and research institutions about research integrity concerns and hinder the correction of the research record if problems are discovered. While the issues and their solutions may vary across different settings, we encourage research institutions, journals and funders to consider how they might improve future collaboration and cooperation on research integrity cases.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A860-A860
Author(s):  
Michael Surace ◽  
Helen Angell ◽  
Christopher Innocenti ◽  
Zhenning Zhang ◽  
Isabelle Gaffney ◽  
...  

BackgroundPredictive biomarkers for response to IO therapies remain insufficient. Although multiplex immunofluorescence has the potential to provide superior biomarkers, the information garnered from these studies is frequently underleveraged. Due to the large number of markers that must be analyzed (6 - 40 +), and the complexity of the spatial information, the number of hypotheses is large and must be tested systematically and automatically. GraphITE (Graphs-based Investigation of Tissues with Embeddings) is a novel method of converting multiplex IF image analysis results into embeddings, numerical vectors which represent the phenotype of each cell as well as the immediate neighborhood. This allows for the clustering of embeddings based on similarity as well as the discovery of novel predictive biomarkers based on both the spatial and multimarker data in multiplex IF images. Here we demonstrate initial observations from deployment of GraphITE on 564 commercially-sourced NSCLC and HNSCC resections stained with a multiplex IF panel containing CD8, PDL1, PD1, CD68, Ki67, and CK.Methods4 μm FFPE tumor sections were stained with CD8, PDL1, PD1, CD68, Ki67, and CK at Akoya Biosciences using OPAL TSA-linked fluorophores and imaged on a Vectra Polaris. Images were analyzed by Computational Biology (AstraZeneca). Graphs were built by mapping each cell in the mIF image as a node, using the X, Y coordinates and connecting nodes with edges according to distance. 64-dimensional embeddings were generated using Deep Graph InfoMax (DGI).1 Embeddings are downprojected to 2 dimensions using UMAP.2. Details are available in the preprint of the GraphITE methods manuscript.3ResultsA single downprojection was developed using embeddings from 158 HNSCC and 406 NSCLC cases. 60–80 distinct clusters were observed, some of which contained embeddings from both indications and others which were exclusive to one indication. Exclusive clusters describe tissue neighborhoods observed only in one indication. Drivers of cluster exclusivity included increased cell density in HNSCC as compared to NSCLC both in PD-L1- tumor centers with few infiltrating lymphocytes as well as in PD-L1- macrophagedominated neighborhoods. HNSCC and NSCLC embeddings were more colocalized in PD-L1+ tumor centers and in tumor stroma with high CD8+ or CD68+ immune cell content and high PD-L1+ expression.ConclusionsThis study demonstrates the utility and potential of the GraphITE platform to discriminate between and describe both unique and common neighborhood-level features of the tumor microenvironment. Deploying GraphITE across multiple indications effectively leverages spatial heterogeneity and multimarker information from multiplex IF panels.References1. Veličković P, Fedus W, Hamilton WL, Liò P, Bengio Y, DevonHjelm R. Deep Graph Infomax. 2018. arxiv:1809.10341 [stat.ML].2. McInnes L, Healy J, Melville J. UMAP: Uniform manifold approximationand projection for dimension reduction. 2020; arxiv:1802.03426 [stat.ML].3. Innocenti C, Zhang Z, Selvaraj B, Gaffney I, Frangos M, Cohen-Setton J, Dillon LAL, Surace MJ, Pedrinaci C, Hipp J, Baykaner K. An unsupervised graph embeddings approach to multiplex immunofluorescence image explorationbioRxiv 2021.06.09.447654; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.06.09.447654Ethics ApprovalThe study was approved by AstraZeneca.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adrian Schütz ◽  
Vishal Bharmauria ◽  
Xiaogang Yan ◽  
Hongying Wang ◽  
Frank Bremmer ◽  
...  

SummaryVisual landmarks influence spatial cognition [1–3], navigation [4,5] and goal-directed behavior [6–8], but their influence on visual coding in sensorimotor systems is poorly understood [6,9–11]. We hypothesized that visual responses in frontal cortex control gaze areas encode potential targets in an intermediate gaze-centered / landmark-centered reference frame that might depend on specific target-landmark configurations rather than a global mechanism. We tested this hypothesis by recording neural activity in the frontal eye fields (FEF) and supplementary eye fields (SEF) while head-unrestrained macaques engaged in a memory-delay gaze task. Visual response fields (the area of visual space where targets modulate activity) were tested for each neuron in the presence of a background landmark placed at one of four oblique configurations relative to the target stimulus. 102 of 312 FEF and 43 of 256 SEF neurons showed spatially tuned response fields in this task. We then fit these data against a mathematical continuum between a gaze-centered model and a landmark-centered model. When we pooled data across the entire dataset for each neuron, our response field fits did not deviate significantly from the gaze-centered model. However, when we fit response fields separately for each target-landmark configuration, the best fits shifted (mean 37% / 40%) toward landmark-centered coding in FEF / SEF respectively. This confirmed an intermediate gaze / landmark-centered mechanism dependent on local (configuration-dependent) interactions. Overall, these data show that external landmarks influence prefrontal visual responses, likely helping to stabilize gaze goals in the presence of variable eye and head orientations.HighlightsPrefrontal visual responses recorded in the presence of visual landmarksResponse fields showed intermediate gaze / landmark-centered organizationThis influence depended on specific target-landmark configurations


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank Moriarty ◽  
Mark H. Ebell

AbstractObjectiveThis study compares the benefits and harms of aspirin for primary prevention before and after widespread use of statins and colorectal cancer screening.MethodsWe compared studies of aspirin for primary prevention that recruited patients from 2005 onward with previous individual patient meta-analyses that recruited patients from 1978 to 2002. Data for contemporary studies were synthesized using random-effects models. We report vascular (major adverse cardiovascular events [MACE], myocardial infarction [MI], stroke), bleeding, cancer, and mortality outcomes.ResultsThe IPD analyses of older studies included 95,456 patients for CV prevention and 25,270 for cancer mortality, while the four newer studies had 61,604 patients. Relative risks for vascular outcomes for older vs newer studies follow: MACE: 0.89 (95% CI 0.83-0.95) vs 0.93 (0.86-0.99); fatal hemorrhagic stroke: 1.73 (1.11-2.72) vs 1.06 (0.66-1.70); any ischemic stroke: 0.86 (0.74-1.00) vs 0.86 (0.75-0.98); any MI: 0.84 (0.77-0.92) vs 0.88 (0.77-1.00); and non-fatal MI: 0.79 (0.71-0.88) vs 0.94 (0.83-1.08). Cancer death was not significantly decreased in newer studies (RR 1.11, 0.92-1.34). Major hemorrhage was significantly increased for both older and newer studies (RR 1.48, 95% CI 1.25-1.76 vs 1.37, 95% CI 1.24-1.53). There was no effect in either group on all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, fatal stroke, or fatal MI.ConclusionsIn the modern era characterized by widespread statin use and cancer screening, aspirin does not reduce the risk of non-fatal MI or cancer death. There are no mortality benefits and a significant risk of major hemorrhage. Aspirin should no longer be recommended for primary prevention.Summary of current evidence and what this study addsWhat is already known about this subject?The cumulative evidence for aspirin suggests a role in the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease, and in reducing cancer incidence and mortality.However most of the trials of aspirin for primary prevention were set in Europe and the United States and recruited patients prior to the year 2000.The benefits and harms of aspirin should be considered separately in studies performed in the eras before and after widespread use of statins and colorectal cancer screening.What does this study add?This study provides the most detailed summary to date of cardiac, stroke, bleeding, mortality and cancer outcomes to date in the literature.In trials of aspirin for primary prevention from 2005 onwards, aspirin reduced major adverse cardiovascular events but significantly increased the risk of bleeding, with no benefit for mortality or,Unlike older studies, there was no reduction in cancer mortality and non-fatal myocardial infarction.How does this impact on clinical practice?Our study suggests aspirin should not be recommended for primary prevention in the modern era.


2006 ◽  
Vol 96 (2) ◽  
pp. 813-825 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoram Gutfreund ◽  
Eric I. Knudsen

Auditory neurons in the owl’s external nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICX) integrate information across frequency channels to create a map of auditory space. This study describes a powerful, sound-driven adaptation of unit responsiveness in the ICX and explores the implications of this adaptation for sensory processing. Adaptation in the ICX was analyzed by presenting lightly anesthetized owls with sequential pairs of dichotic noise bursts. Adaptation occurred in response even to weak, threshold-level sounds and remained strong for more than 100 ms after stimulus offset. Stimulation by one range of sound frequencies caused adaptation that generalized across the entire broad range of frequencies to which these units responded. Identical stimuli were used to test adaptation in the lateral shell of the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICCls), which provides input directly to the ICX. Compared with ICX adaptation, adaptation in the ICCls was substantially weaker, shorter lasting, and far more frequency specific, suggesting that part of the adaptation observed in the ICX was attributable to processes resident to the ICX. The sharp tuning of ICX neurons to space, along with their broad tuning to frequency, allows ICX adaptation to preserve a representation of stimulus location, regardless of the frequency content of the sound. The ICX is known to be a site of visually guided auditory map plasticity. ICX adaptation could play a role in this cross-modal plasticity by providing a short-term memory of the representation of auditory localization cues that could be compared with later-arriving, visual–spatial information from bimodal stimuli.


1986 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 934-952 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Vaadia ◽  
D. A. Benson ◽  
R. D. Hienz ◽  
M. H. Goldstein

The influence of sound localization behavior on unit activity in the frontal cortex of awake rhesus monkeys was examined by comparing responses under three behavioral conditions: auditory localization, during which a response was required to the location of a sound (broad-band noise) source; auditory detect, during which a response was required to indicate the occurrence of the sound regardless of location; visual localization, during which no sounds were presented and a response was required to the location of a visual stimulus; and nonperform, presentation of auditory stimuli as in the first two conditions, but with the animal sitting passively. Extracellular microelectrode recordings were made in the periarcuate region and dorsal and ventral prefrontal areas near the principal sulcus. Four monkeys were used with a total of 498 cells studied. Of the total population, only five cells were found to have characteristics similar to those of auditory units in the primary auditory cortex and the surrounding belt area. More typically, units were found that had strong short-latency responses specific to the auditory and/or visual localization tasks. These units had no or weak responses when the same sound stimuli were presented in the auditory detect task or when a monkey received the sound stimuli in a nonperforming condition. Two regions were identified, one medial and/or posterior to the arcuate sulcus, in Brodmann's area 6; the second included parts of areas 8 and 9 within the genu of the arcuate sulcus. Units from these regions are referred to, respectively, as the postarcuate and the prearcuate populations. Both populations responded predominantly during active localization behavior. Sixty-two percent of the postarcuate population responded during auditory localization, 32% responded during auditory detect, and only 18% responded to acoustic stimuli presented in the nonperforming condition. In the prearcuate population percentages in these three conditions were 35, 25, and 12%, respectively. For visual localization, 54% in the postarcuate population responded, whereas 42% in the prearcuate responded. Spatial tuning of units during auditory localization was similar to that seen in units of the primary auditory cortex, with the greatest percentages of units responding to stimuli contralateral to the recording site. Similar tuning was observed for the visual localization task as well. Similarities in spatial tuning between the auditory and visual localization conditions were examined to assess the "bimodal" nature of the units.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2018 ◽  
Vol 103 (2) ◽  
pp. e1.47-e1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Semple Diarmaid ◽  
McNally Paul ◽  
Fitzpatrick Anne ◽  
Adeyemi Kenny ◽  
McGrory Niamh ◽  
...  

AimsRecent conclusive evidence has suggested that, contrary to previous limited evidence, there is no benefit to the use of 3% hypertonic saline (3% HS) in the treatment of bronchiolitis in infants.1,2 This led to a change in the clinical guideline during the 2015/2016 bronchiolitis season. We hypothesised that the use of hypertonic saline was preventing the use of other un-necessary treatments and that inappropriate prescribing would increase following the advice not to give hypertonic saline.The primary aim of the study was to determine if the removal of 3% hypertonic saline from the institutional clinical guideline would result in reduced prescribing patterns. A secondary aim was to evaluate the overall prescribing compliance with the guideline including in the prescribing of antibiotics and bronchodilators, and identify if the change in the clinical guideline impacted the prescribing of other agents in children admitted with a diagnosis of bronchiolitis.MethodsData on medical treatments and hospital outcomes were prospectively collected on all infants in the 2015/2016 season both before and after the change in guideline. Details of all medicines prescribed on the patients Medication Record particularly bronchodilators, antimicrobials and inhaled agents were collected. Patient demographics were collected from medical notes. Results were analysed using chi square and Mann Whitney in Excel and Stata.Results128 children (86 before, 42 after the change in guideline) were recruited to the study. Baseline demographics were similar except for a higher proportion of children with RSV in the pre-group. Overall guideline compliance was achieved by 2 infants pre, and 3 infants post guideline change (4%). The use of hypertonic saline decreased significantly after the change in guideline but did not cease (90% pre, 71% post p<0.01). Bronchodilators were used in one in 4 infants and antibiotics in one in 3 infants, and there was no significant difference in these rates before or after the change in guidelines.ConclusionThe change to the guideline reduced the use of 3%HS, however overall guideline compliance in children with bronchiolitis is poor. Hypertonic saline use decreased when the guideline changed but a significant portion of children before and after the guideline change received medications not indicated in the treatment of bronchiolitis, including bronchodilators and antibiotics. It appears that it remains difficult to ‘do nothing’ for bronchiolitis. Poor clinical practice remains and education of clinical staff is necessary in this regard.ReferencesGuidance: Bronchiolitis in children: diagnosis and management, NICE (NG9) Published date: June 2015.Silver AH, Esteban-Cruciani N, Azzarone G, et al. 3% hypertonic saline versus normal saline in inpatient bronchiolitis: A randomised controlled trial. Paediatrics2015;136:1036–1043.


1994 ◽  
Vol 71 (6) ◽  
pp. 2582-2585 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. Partsalis ◽  
S. M. Highstein ◽  
A. K. Moschovakis

1. Spontaneous saccades, vestibuloocular responses (VOR), and optokinetic nystagmus were recorded in three squirrel monkeys before and after chemical or electrolytic lesion of the posterior commissure (PC). 2. PC lesions produced abnormal vertical eye movements, in particular, 1) Postsaccadic drifts, and 2) VOR gain reduction and phase advance more pronounced at lower frequencies of sinusoidal head rotation. Horizontal eye movements were much less affected (or normal). 3. We conclude that PC fibers are necessary for conveying the output of the vertical neural integrator to vertical oculomotor-neurons.


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