Erkelens C J, Van der Steen J, Steinman R M, Collewijn H
Department of Physiology I, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Proc R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 1989 May 22;236(1285):417-40. doi: 10.1098/rspb.1989.0030.
Horizontal binocular eye movements of four subjects were recorded with the scleral sensor coil--revolving magnetic field technique while they fixated a natural target, whose distance was varied in a normally illuminated room. The distance of the target relative to the head of the subject was changed in three ways: (a) the target was moved manually by the experimenter; (b) the target was moved manually by the subject; (c) the target remained stationary while the subject moved his upper torso towards and away from the target. The rate of change of target distance was varied systematically in four levels, ranging from 'slow' to 'very fast', corresponding to changes in target vergence from about 10 degrees s-1 to about 100 degrees s-1. The dynamics of ocular vergence with regard to delay and speed were, under all three conditions, considerably better than could be expected from the literature on ocular vergence induced by disparity and/or blur. When 'very fast' changes in the distance of the target were made, subjects achieved maximum vergence speeds of up to about 100 degrees s-1. Delays of these fast vergence responses were generally smaller than 125 ms. Negative delays, i.e. ocular vergence leading the change in target distance, were observed. The eyes led the target (i.e. predicted target motion) by about 90 ms on average, when the subject used his hand to move the target. Vergence tracking was almost perfect when changes in distance were produced by moving the upper torso. In this condition, the eye led the target by about 5 ms. In the 'slow' and 'medium' conditions (stimulus speeds about 10-40 degrees s-1) tracking was accurate to within 1-2 degrees, irrespective of the way in which the target was moved. In the 'fast' and 'very fast' conditions (stimulus speeds about 40-100 degrees s-1), the accuracy of vergence tracking was better for self-induced than for experimenter-induced target displacements, and accuracy was best during voluntary movements of the upper torso. In the last case, ocular vergence speed was within about 10% of the rate of change of the vergence angle formed by the eyes and the stationary target. The dynamics of convergent and divergent vergence responses varied considerably. These variations were idiosyncratic. They were consistent within, but not between, subjects. Ocular vergence associated with attempted fixation of an imagined target, changing distance in darkness, could only be made by two of the four subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
采用巩膜感应线圈——旋转磁场技术记录了4名受试者在正常光照房间内注视自然目标时的水平双眼眼动,该目标的距离是变化的。目标相对于受试者头部的距离通过三种方式改变:(a) 由实验者手动移动目标;(b) 由受试者手动移动目标;(c) 目标保持静止,而受试者将其上半身朝向和远离目标移动。目标距离的变化率系统地分为四个水平,从“慢”到“非常快”,对应于目标聚散度从约10度/秒到约100度/秒的变化。在所有三种情况下,关于延迟和速度的眼聚散动力学都比文献中关于视差和/或模糊引起的眼聚散的预期要好得多。当目标距离发生“非常快”的变化时,受试者达到的最大聚散速度高达约100度/秒。这些快速聚散反应的延迟通常小于125毫秒。观察到了负延迟,即眼聚散领先于目标距离的变化。当受试者用手移动目标时,眼睛平均比目标(即预测的目标运动)领先约90毫秒。当上半身移动导致距离变化时,聚散跟踪几乎完美。在这种情况下,眼睛比目标领先约5毫秒。在“慢”和“中”条件下(刺激速度约为10 - 40度/秒),无论目标如何移动,跟踪精度在1 - 2度以内。在“快”和“非常快”条件下(刺激速度约为40 - 100度/秒),自我诱导的目标位移的聚散跟踪精度优于实验者诱导的,并且在上半身自主运动期间精度最佳。在最后一种情况下,眼聚散速度在眼睛与静止目标形成的聚散角变化率的约10%以内。会聚和发散聚散反应的动力学有很大差异。这些差异是因人而异的。它们在受试者内部是一致的,但在受试者之间不一致。与尝试注视想象中的目标、在黑暗中改变距离相关的眼聚散,只有4名受试者中的2名能够做到。(摘要截选至400字)