1999 — 2001 |
Moore, Tirin |
F32Activity Code Description: To provide postdoctoral research training to individuals to broaden their scientific background and extend their potential for research in specified health-related areas. |
Oculomotor Mechanisms and Spatial Attention
space perception; attention; visual perception; eye movements; saccades; visual fixation; stimulus /response; cues; behavioral /social science research tag; experimental brain lesion; Primates;
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0.954 |
2004 — 2021 |
Moore, Tirin |
R01Activity Code Description: To support a discrete, specified, circumscribed project to be performed by the named investigator(s) in an area representing his or her specific interest and competencies. R56Activity Code Description: To provide limited interim research support based on the merit of a pending R01 application while applicant gathers additional data to revise a new or competing renewal application. This grant will underwrite highly meritorious applications that if given the opportunity to revise their application could meet IC recommended standards and would be missed opportunities if not funded. Interim funded ends when the applicant succeeds in obtaining an R01 or other competing award built on the R56 grant. These awards are not renewable. |
Interaction of Visual and Oculomotor Signals in Cortex
A fundamental fact of vision is that our perception of the external world is shaped by a number of behavioral and contextual factors. These factors include visual selective attention, in which sensory information is filtered in favor of items that are behaviorally and contextually relevant. In addition, it includes the modulation of visual processing during saccadic eye movements which occur several times each second. These factors are known to modulate the processing of visual information and to contribute to adaptive visually guided behavior. In the primate brain, the visual and oculomotor systems are highly interconnected, and past work has shown that movement-related signals exert robust influences on visual processing in visual cortex. The current proposal focuses on addressing key questions concerning the role of gaze control mechanisms in visual selection and visual stability, two ways in which those mechanisms clearly influence visual perception and cognition. These questions will be addressed using a broad set of innovative approaches and tools including newly developed, large-scale, high-density Neuropixels (NP) probes made specifically for use in nonhuman primates. In this first aim, we will test the role of persistent activity in the selection of visual signals and in visually guided saccades in a set of key, complementary experiments that include large-scale neurophysiological recordings with primate NP probes. Our hypothesis is that persistent activity in the frontal eye field (FEF) serves primarily to select the visual information required to guide saccadic eye movements, and that this function is mediated by dopamine D1Rs. In the second aim, we will address a major open question regarding the basis of stimulus-driven attention by testing the contribution of posterior parietal cortex (PPC) to the representation of visual salience in the brain, and to saliency-driven behavior. Experiments in this aim combine the use of reversible inactivation of PPC with large- scale neurophysiological recordings and behavior. In the third aim, we will address another major open question regarding the basis of the distortions in vision that occur during saccadic eye movements. We will leverage the use of large-scale recordings, and the use of reversible parietal inactivation to test the role of PPC in perisaccadic changes in visual processing within extrastriate visual cortex and the FEF. Overall, our focus on the influence of gaze control mechanisms on visual processing, combined with our use of state-of-the-art neurophysiological approaches and causal methods, are likely to produce results that exert a large and sustained impact on our understanding of the neural mechanisms of visual perception and cognition.
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1 |
2017 — 2021 |
Moore, Tirin |
P30Activity Code Description: To support shared resources and facilities for categorical research by a number of investigators from different disciplines who provide a multidisciplinary approach to a joint research effort or from the same discipline who focus on a common research problem. The core grant is integrated with the center's component projects or program projects, though funded independently from them. This support, by providing more accessible resources, is expected to assure a greater productivity than from the separate projects and program projects. |
Device Design and Development
Device Design and Development Core PROJECT SUMMARY This core will provide the primary source of critical device, design and development of custom experimental equipment to NEl-funded vision research in the laboratories of numerous investigators, and serve as a centralized resource to promote shared device designs to facilitate entry into vision research and collaboration. The machine shop, which is housed within the Fairchild Building, will serve as one key node for providing this service. The machine shop will provide not only frequent services to construct innovative new equipment used in specific approaches in vision research, but will also be called upon to provide device design and development. In addition, the machine shop will consult in the design of specialized equipment to be fabricated via outside 3- D printing services. The core director will be Tirin Moore, an NEl-funded independent Professor who has extensive experience with device development and the management of the machine shop.
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1 |