Jenks Vestibular Physiology Lab, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Otolaryngology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
J Assoc Res Otolaryngol. 2022 Aug;23(4):551-566. doi: 10.1007/s10162-022-00853-3. Epub 2022 Jun 29.
Velocity storage is a centrally-mediated mechanism that processes peripheral vestibular inputs. One prominent aspect of velocity storage is its effect on dynamic responses to yaw rotation. Specifically, when normal human subjects are accelerated to constant angular yaw velocity, horizontal eye movements and perceived angular velocity decay exponentially with a time constant circa 15-30 s, even though the input from the vestibular periphery decays much faster (~ 6 s). Peripheral vestibular damage causes a time constant reduction, which is useful for clinical diagnoses, but a mechanistic explanation for the relationship between vestibular damage and changes in these behavioral dynamics is lacking. It has been hypothesized that Bayesian optimization determines ideal velocity storage dynamics based on statistics of vestibular noise and experienced motion. Specifically, while a longer time constant would make the central estimate of angular head velocity closer to actual head motion, it may also result in the accumulation of neural noise which simultaneously degrades precision. Thus, the brain may balance these two effects by determining the time constant that optimizes behavior. We applied a Bayesian optimal Kalman filter to determine the ideal velocity storage time constant for unilateral damage. Predicted time constants were substantially lower than normal and similar to patients. Building on our past work showing that Bayesian optimization explains age-related changes in velocity storage, we also modeled interactions between age-related hair cell loss and peripheral damage. These results provide a plausible mechanistic explanation for changes in velocity storage after peripheral damage. Results also suggested that even after peripheral damage, noise originating in the periphery or early central processing may remain relevant in neurocomputations. Overall, our findings support the hypothesis that the brain optimizes velocity storage based on the vestibular signal-to-noise ratio.
速度储存是一种中枢介导的机制,用于处理外周前庭输入。速度储存的一个显著特点是它对偏航旋转动态响应的影响。具体来说,当正常的人类被加速到恒定的角速时,水平眼球运动和感知的角速度会以大约 15-30 秒的时间常数呈指数衰减,尽管前庭外周的输入衰减得更快(约 6 秒)。外周前庭损伤会导致时间常数降低,这对于临床诊断很有用,但缺乏前庭损伤与这些行为动力学变化之间关系的机制解释。有人假设贝叶斯优化根据前庭噪声和经历运动的统计信息来确定理想的速度储存动力学。具体来说,虽然较长的时间常数会使中央对头部角速度的估计更接近实际头部运动,但它也可能导致神经噪声的积累,同时降低精度。因此,大脑可能通过确定优化行为的时间常数来平衡这两种效果。我们应用贝叶斯最优卡尔曼滤波器来确定单侧损伤的理想速度储存时间常数。预测的时间常数明显低于正常水平,与患者相似。基于我们过去的工作表明贝叶斯优化可以解释速度储存随年龄的变化,我们还模拟了年龄相关的毛细胞损失和外周损伤之间的相互作用。这些结果为外周损伤后速度储存的变化提供了一个合理的机制解释。结果还表明,即使在外周损伤后,起源于外周或早期中枢处理的噪声在神经计算中可能仍然相关。总的来说,我们的研究结果支持这样一种假设,即大脑根据前庭信号噪声比来优化速度储存。