Parietal neurons encoding visual space in a head-frame of reference.
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Neurons of the visual system are known to have receptive fields organized in retinotopic coordinates. We wanted to test whether visual neurons existed whose receptive fields were organized in spatial coordinates. Extracellular recordings from single cells were carried out in one area of the posterior parietal cortex (area V6) of a behaving macaque monkey. Among a great majority of retinotopically organized visual cells, neurons whose visual receptive field did not shift with gaze were also found. These cells responded to the visual stimulation of the same spatial position independently of the animal's direction of gaze, that is, their receptive field was anchored to an absolute spatial location. We suggest that these neurons directly encode visual space and are involved in programming visually-guided motor actions in space.