Sargent E W, Paige G D
Department of Otolaryngology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110.
Exp Brain Res. 1991;87(1):75-84. doi: 10.1007/BF00228508.
The squirrel monkey vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) was studied in darkness during Earth-horizontal rotation over a frequency range, 0.01-4 Hz, with the head positioned both centrally and displaced radially relative to the axis of rotation. With the head centered, the canal-mediated angular VOR (AVOR) was recorded in isolation. However, with the head placed eccentrically, otolith-mediated linear VOR (LVOR) components interact with the AVOR to yield a combined AVOR-LVOR response. The plane of the ocular response could be manipulated by placing the head in different orientations relative to gravity (i.e. upright or nose-up). When the head was upright and centered, the horizontal AVOR was recorded. Comparisons between eye and head angular velocity showed that gain (pk eye/pk head velocity) was nearly flat, averaging 0.83, across the frequency range. Phase (difference in degrees between eye and head velocity, shifted 180 degrees by convention) was near 0 degrees, except at frequencies below 0.1 Hz where phase leads were seen. When the head was displaced eccentrically and in the nose-out position (facing away from the axis of rotation), gain rose above that of the AVOR alone. The enhancement was progressive with increasing frequency, but only for frequencies above 0.25 Hz. When the subject was turned nose-in, gain declined relative to the AVOR alone, and in a similar frequency-dependent fashion. These results are consistent with the notion that nose-out and nose-in responses to eccentric rotation represent a combined influence of the horizontal AVOR and LVOR, the latter driven by inter-aural tangential acceleration. To further evaluate this possibility, eccentric rotation was also used to assess the LVOR in isolation. With the head in the nose-up orientation, the AVOR was shifted into the head's roll plane and generated torsional ocular responses. With the head centered over the axis of rotation, no systematic horizontal responses were observed. However, when the head was displaced eccentrically and placed in the head-out and head-in positions, horizontal ocular responses were recorded which were proportional to head eccentricity and were of appropriate polarity to presume that they represented the inter-aural LVOR activated by inter-aural tangential acceleration. Response gain rose with increasing frequency, as did tangential acceleration. The LVOR in its resting state in darkness could be characterized by an average sensitivity of 40.3 degrees/s/g (g = 9.81 m/s2).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
在黑暗环境中,研究松鼠猴在0.01 - 4Hz频率范围内进行地球水平旋转时的前庭眼反射(VOR),头部位置分别处于旋转轴中心以及相对于旋转轴径向位移的位置。当头部位于中心时,单独记录半规管介导的角向VOR(AVOR)。然而,当头部偏心放置时,耳石介导的线性VOR(LVOR)成分与AVOR相互作用,产生组合的AVOR - LVOR反应。通过将头部相对于重力置于不同方向(即直立或鼻朝上),可以操纵眼动反应平面。当头部直立且位于中心时,记录水平AVOR。眼动和头部角速度的比较表明,在整个频率范围内,增益(峰值眼动/峰值头部速度)几乎是平坦的,平均为0.83。相位(眼动和头部速度之间的度数差,按惯例偏移180度)接近0度,除了在低于0.1Hz的频率处观察到相位超前。当头部偏心位移并处于鼻外位置(背向旋转轴)时,增益高于单独的AVOR。这种增强随着频率增加而渐进,但仅在高于0.25Hz的频率时出现。当受试者转向鼻内时,增益相对于单独的AVOR下降,并且以类似的频率依赖性方式下降。这些结果与以下观点一致,即对偏心旋转的鼻外和鼻内反应代表水平AVOR和LVOR的联合影响,后者由耳间切向加速度驱动。为了进一步评估这种可能性,还使用偏心旋转单独评估LVOR。当头部处于鼻朝上方向时,AVOR转移到头部的滚动平面并产生扭转眼动反应。当头部位于旋转轴上方中心时,未观察到系统性的水平反应。然而,当头部偏心位移并置于头外和头内位置时,记录到水平眼动反应,其与头部偏心度成比例,并且具有适当的极性,推测它们代表由耳间切向加速度激活的耳间LVOR。反应增益随频率增加而上升,切向加速度也是如此。黑暗中静止状态下的LVOR的平均灵敏度可以表征为40.3度/秒/克(g = 9.81米/秒²)。(摘要截断于400字)