Arshad Qadeer, Saman Yougan, Sharif Mishaal, Kaski Diego, Staab Jeffrey P
Neuro-Otology Unit, Department of Brain Sciences, Charing Cross Hospital Campus, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
inAmind Laboratory, Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour, University of Leicester, Leicester, United Kingdom.
Front Integr Neurosci. 2022 Feb 4;15:806940. doi: 10.3389/fnint.2021.806940. eCollection 2021.
Maintaining balance necessitates an accurate perceptual map of the external world. Neuro-physiological mechanisms of locomotor control, sensory perception, and anxiety systems have been viewed as separate entities that can on occasion affect each other (i.e., walking on ice). Emerging models are more integrated, that envision sensory perception and threat assessment as a fundamental component of balance. Here we present an empirically based theoretical argument that vestibular cortical areas construct magnitude estimates of our environment neural integration of incoming sensory signals. In turn, these cortically derived magnitude estimates, construct context-dependent vestibulo-spatial and vestibulo-temporal, representational maps of the external world, and ensure an appropriate online scaling factor for associated action-perceptual risk. Thus, threat signals are able to exert continuous influence on planning movements, predicting outcomes of motion of self and surrounding objects, and adjusting tolerances for discrepancies between predicted and actual estimates. Such a process affects the degree of conscious attention directed to spatial and temporal aspects of motion stimuli, implying that maintaining balance may follow a Bayesian approach in which the relative weighting of vestibulo-spatial and vestibulo-temporal signals and tolerance for discrepancies are adjusted in accordance with the level of threat assessment. Here, we seek to mechanistically explain this process with our novel empirical concept of a Brainstem Cortical Scaling Metric (BCSM), which we developed from a series of neurophysiological studies illustrating the central role of interhemispheric vestibulo-cortical asymmetries for balance control. We conclude by using the BCSM to derive theoretical predictions of how a dysfunctional BCSM can mechanistically account for functional dizziness.
维持平衡需要对外部世界有准确的感知地图。运动控制、感官知觉和焦虑系统的神经生理机制一直被视为相互独立的实体,只是偶尔会相互影响(例如,在冰上行走)。新兴模型则更加综合,将感官知觉和威胁评估视为平衡的基本组成部分。在此,我们提出一个基于实证的理论观点,即前庭皮质区域构建对我们环境的量级估计——对传入感官信号的神经整合。反过来,这些源自皮质的量级估计构建了依赖于上下文的前庭空间和前庭时间的外部世界表征地图,并确保为相关的动作-感知风险提供适当的在线缩放因子。因此,威胁信号能够对计划运动、预测自我和周围物体的运动结果以及调整预测与实际估计之间差异的容忍度施加持续影响。这样一个过程会影响对运动刺激的空间和时间方面的有意识关注程度,这意味着维持平衡可能遵循一种贝叶斯方法,其中前庭空间和前庭时间信号的相对权重以及对差异的容忍度会根据威胁评估水平进行调整。在此,我们试图用我们全新的脑干皮质缩放度量(BCSM)实证概念从机制上解释这一过程,该概念是我们从一系列神经生理学研究中发展而来的,这些研究阐明了半球间前庭-皮质不对称在平衡控制中的核心作用。我们通过使用BCSM得出关于功能失调的BCSM如何从机制上解释功能性头晕的理论预测来结束本文。