Bioastronautics and Human Performance Laboratory, Department of Aerospace Engineering, Department of Health and Kinesiology, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-3141, USA. Electronic address: https://bhp.engr.tamu.edu.
Jenks Vestibular Physiology Laboratory, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, Harvard Medical School, Boston MA, USA.
Neuroscience. 2021 Aug 1;468:282-320. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2021.05.028. Epub 2021 Jun 2.
Precision and accuracy are two fundamental properties of any system, including the nervous system. Reduced precision (i.e., imprecision) results from the presence of neural noise at each level of sensory, motor, and perceptual processing. This review has three objectives: (1) to show the importance of studying vestibular precision, and specifically that studying accuracy without studying precision ignores fundamental aspects of the vestibular system; (2) to synthesize key hypotheses about precision in vestibular perception, the vestibulo-ocular reflex, posture, and neurons; and (3) to show that groups of studies that are thoughts to be distinct (e.g., perceptual thresholds, subjective visual vertical variability, neuronal variability) are actually "two sides of the same coin" - because the methods used allow results to be related to the standard deviation of a Gaussian distribution describing the underlying neural noise. Vestibular precision varies with age, stimulus amplitude, stimulus frequency, body orientation, motion direction, pathology, medication, and electrical/mechanical vestibular stimulation, but does not vary with sex. The brain optimizes precision during integration of vestibular cues with visual, auditory, and/or somatosensory cues. Since a common concern with precision metrics is time required for testing, we describe approaches to optimize data collection and provide evidence that fatigue and session effects are minimal. Finally, we summarize how precision is an individual trait that is correlated with clinical outcomes in patients as well as with performance in functional tasks like balance. These findings highlight the importance of studying vestibular precision and accuracy, and that knowledge gaps remain.
精度和准确性是任何系统的两个基本属性,包括神经系统。在感觉、运动和感知处理的各个层次上,由于存在神经噪声,精度(即不准确性)降低。本次综述有三个目标:(1)展示研究前庭精度的重要性,特别是在不研究精度的情况下研究准确性忽略了前庭系统的基本方面;(2)综合前庭感知、眼动反射、姿势和神经元精度的关键假设;(3)表明被认为是不同的研究群体(例如,感知阈值、主观垂直视觉变异性、神经元变异性)实际上是“同一枚硬币的两面”——因为所使用的方法允许将结果与描述潜在神经噪声的高斯分布的标准差相关联。前庭精度随年龄、刺激幅度、刺激频率、身体方向、运动方向、病理、药物和电/机械前庭刺激而变化,但不受性别影响。大脑在将前庭线索与视觉、听觉和/或躯体感觉线索整合时优化精度。由于精度指标的一个常见关注点是测试所需的时间,因此我们描述了优化数据收集的方法,并提供了证据表明疲劳和会话效应最小。最后,我们总结了精度如何成为与患者临床结果以及平衡等功能任务表现相关的个体特征。这些发现强调了研究前庭精度和准确性的重要性,并且仍然存在知识差距。