Hirata Y, Highstein S M
Department of Electronic Engineering, Chubu University College of Engineering, Aichi 487-8501, Japan.
J Neurophysiol. 2001 May;85(5):2267-88. doi: 10.1152/jn.2001.85.5.2267.
The gain of the vertical vestibuloocular reflex (VVOR), defined as eye velocity/head velocity was adapted in squirrel monkeys by employing visual-vestibular mismatch stimuli. VVOR gain, measured in the dark, could be trained to values between 0.4 and 1.5. Single-unit activity of vertical zone Purkinje cells was recorded from the flocculus and ventral paraflocculus in alert squirrel monkeys before and during the gain change training. Our goal was to evaluate the site(s) of learning of the gain change. To aid in the evaluation, a model of the vertical optokinetic reflex (VOKR) and VVOR was constructed consisting of floccular and nonfloccular systems divided into subsystems based on the known anatomy and input and output parameters. Three kinds of input to floccular Purkinje cells via mossy fibers were explicitly described, namely vestibular, visual (retinal slip), and efference copy of eye movement. The characteristics of each subsystem (gain and phase) were identified at different VOR gains by reconstructing single-unit activity of Purkinje cells during VOKR and VVOR with multiple linear regression models consisting of sensory input and motor output signals. Model adequacy was checked by evaluating the residual following the regressions and by predicting Purkinje cells' activity during visual-vestibular mismatch paradigms. As a result, parallel changes in identified characteristics with VVOR adaptation were found in the prefloccular/floccular subsystem that conveys vestibular signals and in the nonfloccular subsystem that conveys vestibular signals, while no change was found in other subsystems, namely prefloccular/floccular subsystems conveying efference copy or visual signals, nonfloccular subsystem conveying visual signals, and postfloccular subsystem transforming Purkinje cell activity to eye movements. The result suggests multiple sites for VVOR motor learning including both flocculus and nonflocculus pathways. The gain change in the nonfloccular vestibular subsystem was in the correct direction to cause VOR gain adaptation while the change in the prefloccular/floccular vestibular subsystem was incorrect (anti-compensatory). This apparent incorrect directional change might serve to prevent instability of the VOR caused by positive feedback via the efference copy pathway.
垂直前庭眼反射(VVOR)的增益定义为眼速度/头速度,通过使用视觉-前庭不匹配刺激在松鼠猴中进行了适应性调整。在黑暗中测量的VVOR增益可以被训练到0.4至1.5之间的值。在增益变化训练之前和期间,从警觉的松鼠猴的绒球和腹侧旁绒球记录垂直区浦肯野细胞的单单位活动。我们的目标是评估增益变化的学习位点。为了辅助评估,构建了一个垂直视动反射(VOKR)和VVOR的模型,该模型由绒球和非绒球系统组成,根据已知的解剖结构以及输入和输出参数划分为子系统。明确描述了通过苔藓纤维对绒球浦肯野细胞的三种输入,即前庭输入、视觉输入(视网膜滑动)和眼球运动的传出拷贝。通过用由感觉输入和运动输出信号组成的多元线性回归模型重建VOKR和VVOR期间浦肯野细胞的单单位活动,确定了每个子系统(增益和相位)在不同VOR增益下的特征。通过评估回归后的残差以及预测视觉-前庭不匹配范式期间浦肯野细胞的活动来检查模型的充分性。结果发现,在传递前庭信号的绒球前/绒球子系统和传递前庭信号的非绒球子系统中,识别出的特征与VVOR适应性平行变化,而在其他子系统中未发现变化,即传递传出拷贝或视觉信号的绒球前/绒球子系统、传递视觉信号的非绒球子系统以及将浦肯野细胞活动转化为眼球运动的绒球后子系统。结果表明,VVOR运动学习存在多个位点,包括绒球和非绒球通路。非绒球前庭子系统中的增益变化方向正确,可导致VOR增益适应,而绒球前/绒球前庭子系统中的变化方向错误(反补偿)。这种明显的错误方向变化可能有助于防止通过传出拷贝通路的正反馈导致的VOR不稳定。