Angelaki Dora E
Department of Neurobiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2003 May;89(5):2685-96. doi: 10.1152/jn.01137.2002.
Previous studies have reported that the translational vestibuloocular reflex (TVOR) follows a three-dimensional (3D) kinematic behavior that is more similar to visually guided eye movements, like pursuit, rather than the rotational VOR (RVOR). Accordingly, TVOR rotation axes tilted with eye position toward an eye-fixed reference frame rather than staying relatively fixed in the head like in the RVOR. This difference arises because, contrary to the RVOR where peripheral image stability is functionally important, the TVOR like pursuit and saccades cares to stabilize images on the fovea. During most natural head and body movements, both VORs are simultaneously activated. In the present study, we have investigated in rhesus monkeys the 3D kinematics of the combined VOR during yaw rotation about eccentric axes. The experiments were motivated by and quantitatively compared with the predictions of two distinct hypotheses. According to the first (fixed-rule) hypothesis, an eye-position-dependent torsion is computed downstream of a site for RVOR/TVOR convergence, and the combined VOR axis would tilt through an angle that is proportional to gaze angle and independent of the relative RVOR/TVOR contributions to the total eye movement. This hypothesis would be consistent with the recently postulated mechanical constraints imposed by extraocular muscle pulleys. According to the second (image-stabilization) hypothesis, an eye-position-dependent torsion is computed separately for the RVOR and the TVOR components, implying a processing that takes place upstream of a site for RVOR/TVOR convergence. The latter hypothesis is based on the functional requirement that the 3D kinematics of the combined VOR should be governed by the need to keep images stable on the fovea with slip on the peripheral retina being dependent on the different functional goals of the two VORs. In contrast to the fixed-rule hypothesis, the data demonstrated a variable eye-position-dependent torsion for the combined VOR that was different for synergistic versus antagonistic RVOR/TVOR interactions. Furthermore, not only were the eye-velocity tilt slopes of the combined VOR as much as 10 times larger than what would be expected based on extraocular muscle pulley location, but also eye velocity during antagonistic RVOR/TVOR combinations often tilted opposite to gaze. These results are qualitatively and quantitatively consistent with the image-stabilization hypothesis, suggesting that the eye-position-dependent torsion is computed separately for the RVOR and the TVOR and that the 3D kinematics of the combined VOR are dependent on functional rather than mechanical constraints.
以往的研究报告称,平移性前庭眼反射(TVOR)遵循一种三维(3D)运动学行为,这种行为更类似于视觉引导的眼球运动,如追踪,而不是旋转性前庭眼反射(RVOR)。因此,TVOR的旋转轴会随着眼球位置向眼球固定的参考系倾斜,而不是像RVOR那样在头部相对固定。出现这种差异的原因是,与RVOR中外周图像稳定性在功能上很重要不同,TVOR像追踪和扫视一样,关心的是将图像稳定在中央凹上。在大多数自然的头部和身体运动中,两种前庭眼反射都会同时被激活。在本研究中,我们在恒河猴身上研究了绕偏心轴进行偏航旋转时联合前庭眼反射的三维运动学。这些实验的动机是基于两个不同假设的预测,并对其进行了定量比较。根据第一个(固定规则)假设,在RVOR/TVOR汇聚位点的下游计算与眼球位置相关的扭转,联合前庭眼反射轴将倾斜一个与注视角度成比例的角度,且与RVOR/TVOR对总眼球运动的相对贡献无关。这个假设与最近提出的眼外肌滑车施加的机械约束是一致的。根据第二个(图像稳定)假设,分别为RVOR和TVOR分量计算与眼球位置相关的扭转,这意味着在RVOR/TVOR汇聚位点的上游进行处理。后一个假设基于这样的功能需求,即联合前庭眼反射的三维运动学应该由在中央凹上保持图像稳定的需求来控制,外周视网膜上的滑动取决于两种前庭眼反射的不同功能目标。与固定规则假设相反,数据表明联合前庭眼反射存在与眼球位置相关的可变扭转,但对于协同与拮抗的RVOR/TVOR相互作用是不同的。此外,联合前庭眼反射的眼球速度倾斜斜率不仅比基于眼外肌滑车位置预期的大10倍,而且在拮抗的RVOR/TVOR组合期间眼球速度常常与注视方向相反倾斜。这些结果在定性和定量上都与图像稳定假设一致,表明分别为RVOR和TVOR计算与眼球位置相关的扭转,并且联合前庭眼反射的三维运动学取决于功能而非机械约束。