Hiring in life sciences? Share your open positions with our professional community. Read more Close

Advertisement

Gaze shifts in freely moving mice comprise distinct head-eye coordination motifs

Created on 18 Jun 2026

Authors

Hou, Y., Schneider, M., Shin, J., Niell, C. M., Beyeler, M.

Abstract

Freely moving mice are generally thought to redirect gaze mainly through head-coupled movements, with eye movements stabilizing the retinal image or resetting eye position. This reflexive view leaves unresolved whether gaze shifts also include active coordination modes. Here we show that a single gaze-shift class resolves into multiple distinct head-eye coordination motifs. Using high-resolution head and eye tracking in freely moving mice, we identified four reproducible motifs: Head-before-Eye (HbE), Head-with-Eye (HwE), Head-Dominant (HD), and Eye-Dominant (ED). The motifs differed in head-eye timing, locomotor context, and pre-onset visual-behavioral structure. Their short-timescale sequential organization was non-random: HD formed alternating side-to-side head movements, whereas HwE-HbE-ED formed a directed transition chain preserved within each movement direction. Simultaneous neural recordings further revealed motif-dependent responses in primary visual cortex (V1) and superficial superior colliculus (sSC), with stronger sSC than V1 modulation for the three motifs distinguished by pre-onset visual-behavioral structure (all but HbE). HwE showed the clearest signature of active orienting, combining near-synchronous head-eye onset, strong relevance to visual-behavioral features, and the largest pre-onset and earliest peri-onset responses in sSC. These results expand a unitary view of gaze shifts in freely moving mice into a diverse, structured repertoire of coordination motifs, and identify HwE as a candidate active gaze-shift mode during natural behavior.

Preprint server: bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 18 Jun 2026.

Advertisement

Stats

  • Community rating n/a 0 votes
  • Your rating

1-terrible, 9-excellent. How would you rate this preprint? Sign in in to submit your rating.

  • Recommendations n/a n/a positive of 0 vote(s)
  • Views 12
  • Comments 0

Recommended by

  • No recommendations yet.

Post a comment

You need to be signed in to post comments. You can sign in here.

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Advertisement