PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Philip R. L. Parker AU - Dylan M. Martins AU - Emmalyn S. P. Leonard AU - Nathan M. Casey AU - Shelby L. Sharp AU - Elliott T. T. Abe AU - Matthew C. Smear AU - Jacob L. Yates AU - Jude F. Mitchell AU - Cristopher M. Niell TI - A dynamic sequence of visual processing initiated by gaze shifts AID - 10.1101/2022.08.23.504847 DP - 2022 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 2022.08.23.504847 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/08/25/2022.08.23.504847.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/08/25/2022.08.23.504847.full AB - Animals move their head and eyes as they explore and sample the visual scene. Previous studies have demonstrated neural correlates of head and eye movements in rodent primary visual cortex (V1), but the sources and computational roles of these signals are unclear. We addressed this by combining measurement of head and eye movements with high density neural recordings in freely moving mice. V1 neurons responded primarily to gaze shifts, where head movements are accompanied by saccadic eye movements, but not to head movements where compensatory eye movements stabilize gaze. A variety of activity patterns immediately followed gaze shifts, including units with positive, biphasic, or negative responses, and together these responses formed a temporal sequence following the gaze shift. These responses were greatly diminished in the dark for the vast majority of units, replaced by a uniform suppression of activity, and were similar to those evoked by sequentially flashed stimuli in head-fixed conditions, suggesting that gaze shift transients represent the temporal response to the rapid onset of new visual input. Notably, neurons responded in a sequence that matches their spatial frequency preference, from low to high spatial frequency tuning, consistent with coarse-to-fine processing of the visual scene following each gaze shift. Recordings in foveal V1 of freely gazing head-fixed marmosets revealed a similar sequence of temporal response following a saccade, as well as the progression of spatial frequency tuning. Together, our results demonstrate that active vision in both mice and marmosets consists of a dynamic temporal sequence of neural activity associated with visual sampling.HighlightsDuring free movement, neurons in mouse V1 respond to head movements that are accompanied by a gaze-shifting saccadic eye movement, but not a compensatory eye movement.Neurons respond to gaze shifts with diverse temporal dynamics that form a sequence across the population, from early positive responses to biphasic and negative responses.In darkness, most neurons show a uniform suppression following a gaze shift.Temporal dynamics of responses correspond to a neuron’s temporal and spatial frequency preferences, consistent with a coarse-to-fine processing sequence.A similar temporal sequence following saccades is observed in foveal V1 of freely gazing head-fixed marmosets, demonstrating shared aspects of active visual processing across species.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.