Crane B T, Demer J L
Jules Stein Eye Institute, Department of Ophthalmology, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095-7002, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 1999 Apr;125(3):335-43. doi: 10.1007/s002210050689.
Eye, head, and torso movements were recorded using magnetic search coils while six normal human subjects made unconstrained eye and head movements as they searched for targets in a panoramic visual environment. Torso movements were imposed by pseudorandom rotations of a servomotor-driver chair in which subjects were seated; body motion was partially transmitted to the head as a perturbation. Horizontal vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) gain (eye velocity divided by head velocity) and head gain (head velocity divided by torso velocity) were determined. Measurements were performed with unaided vision and while subjects wore x4 binocular telescopic spectacles. Since the head was free to move during the experiment, much of the perturbation delivered to the torso was compensated by head rotation on the neck. During the 50 ms immediately following chair rotation, the head corrected 98% of the torso motion. For the interval 50-80 ms after the perturbation 81-85% of the perturbation was corrected by head movement. The degree of head compensation did not significantly depend on magnification or type of visual target. The density distribution for VOR gain was calculated over the entire course of each trial and was found to be sharply centered between 0.9 and 1.0 for trials with unmagnified vision. The gain density distribution with x4 telescopes was broader and centered around 1.5, reflecting visual enhancement. Gain of the VOR was also determined during four discrete epochs covering the period from 50 ms before to 130 ms after the onset of each imposed torso rotation. The first, second, and fourth epochs were 50 ms each, while the third epoch was 30 ms. The torso began to rotate in the second epoch (0-50 ms), and the onset of head rotation was in the third epoch (50-80 ms). Gains of the VOR determined during the first three epochs were in response to self-generated head rotation and were not significantly different from each other, averaging 1.0+/-0.4 (n=1604, mean+/-SD) with unaided vision and increased significantly (P<0.05) to 1.4+/-0.6 (n=2464) with telescopic spectacles. Gain of the VOR during the fourth (80-130 ms) epoch was in response to the imposed perturbation; this averaged 0.9+/-0.3 (n=1380) with unaided vision and increased significantly to 1.1+/-0.4 (n=2185) with telescopic spectacles. The wearing of telescopic spectacles thus induced an enhancement of VOR gain, which was dependent on the context of the associated head movement. The greater enhancement of VOR gain during self-generated head movement suggests that the large enhancement may be at least partially mediated by the motor program itself. However, the smaller, but still significant gain enhancement with telescopic spectacles observed during unpredictable, externally imposed head motion had a latency too short to be mediated by visual pursuit. We propose that the smaller gain enhancement during passive rotation is due to a small, context-dependent, parametric increase in the gain of canal or proprioceptive mediated eye movements.
使用磁搜索线圈记录眼睛、头部和身体的运动,6名正常受试者坐在由伺服电机驱动的椅子上,在全景视觉环境中搜索目标时进行无约束的眼球和头部运动。椅子由伪随机旋转驱动,受试者坐在上面,身体运动部分作为干扰传递到头部。测定了水平前庭眼反射(VOR)增益(眼球速度除以头部速度)和头部增益(头部速度除以身体速度)。测量在受试者裸眼以及佩戴x4双目望远镜眼镜的情况下进行。由于实验过程中头部可以自由移动,传递到身体的大部分干扰通过颈部的头部旋转得到补偿。在椅子旋转后的50毫秒内,头部校正了98%的身体运动。在干扰后的50-80毫秒间隔内,81-85%的干扰通过头部运动得到校正。头部补偿程度与视觉目标的放大倍数或类型没有显著关系。计算每次试验全过程的VOR增益密度分布,发现裸眼试验时增益密度分布在0.9至1.0之间急剧集中。佩戴x4望远镜时增益密度分布更宽,集中在1.5左右,反映了视觉增强。还在每次施加身体旋转前50毫秒至旋转后130毫秒的四个离散时间段内测定了VOR增益。第一个、第二个和第四个时间段各为50毫秒,第三个时间段为30毫秒。身体在第二个时间段(0-50毫秒)开始旋转,头部旋转开始于第三个时间段(50-80毫秒)。在前三个时间段测定的VOR增益是对自发头部旋转的反应,彼此之间没有显著差异,裸眼时平均为1.0±0.4(n=1604,平均值±标准差),佩戴望远镜眼镜时显著增加(P<0.05)至1.4±0.6(n=2464)。第四个时间段(80-130毫秒)的VOR增益是对施加干扰的反应;裸眼时平均为0.9±0.3(n=1380),佩戴望远镜眼镜时显著增加至1.1±0.4(n=2185)。因此,佩戴望远镜眼镜会引起VOR增益增强,这取决于相关头部运动的背景。自发头部运动时VOR增益的更大增强表明,这种大的增强可能至少部分由运动程序本身介导。然而,在不可预测的外部施加头部运动期间观察到的佩戴望远镜眼镜时较小但仍显著的增益增强,其潜伏期太短,无法由视觉追踪介导。我们认为,被动旋转时较小的增益增强是由于半规管或本体感受介导的眼球运动增益的小的、依赖背景的参数增加。