Hess B J, Precht W, Reber A, Cazin L
Neuroscience. 1985 May;15(1):97-107. doi: 10.1016/0306-4522(85)90126-5.
Horizontal optokinetic nystagmus was elicited in rats by rotation of a pattern of bright dots projected onto a cylinder surrounding the animal. Eye position was measured with the electromagnetic search coil technique. Optokinetic stimuli consisted either of velocity steps of pattern rotation or sinusoidal oscillations. Closed-loop gain (slow phase eye velocity/pattern velocity) of steady-stage step responses in binocular vision ranged between 0.8 and 1.0 for pattern velocities up to 20-40 degrees/s and decreased thereafter. Open-loop gain (steady-state slow phase velocity/retinal slip velocity) was dependent on retinal slip velocity and decreased linearly in double logarithmic plot from about 30 (at 0.5 degree/s) to about 9 (at 5 degrees/s). For retinal slip velocities larger than 5 degrees/s open-loop gain decayed faster and reached about 1 at 30 degrees/s. Step response profiles showed a gradual increase in slow phase eye velocity reaching steady-state after a time period roughly proportional to stimulus velocity. Initial slow phase velocity measured within 500 ms after stimulus onset reached between 2 and 4 degrees/s and was largely independent of stimulus amplitudes above 10 degrees/s. Occasionally rats showed fast rises in slow phase eye velocity at the onset of the step response profiles. Primary and secondary optokinetic afternystagmus were present. Duration of primary afternystagmus was largely independent of stimulus amplitude and lasted 8.0 +/- 4 s. Closed-loop gain of steady-state step responses in monocular vision was, for temporonasal stimuli, similar to that measured in binocular condition while for nasotemporal stimulation gain was much smaller even at low stimulus velocities. Sinusoidal modulation of slow phase velocity was linearly dependent on stimulus velocity; the linear range decreased as frequency of stimulation increased. Slow phase velocity gain was relatively constant (ca 0.8) between 0.05 and 0.3 Hz and showed only a small tendency to decrease at larger stimulus frequencies. Phase-lag increased strongly with stimulus frequency and could be fitted by assuming a response time delay of 100 ms. The results show that the rat's optokinetic system is qualitatively similar to that found in another lateral-eyed species, namely the rabbit. At a quantitative level, however, both fast and slow optokinetic response dynamics appear to be better developed in the rat than in the rabbit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
通过将投射有亮点图案的圆柱体围绕动物旋转,在大鼠中诱发水平视动性眼震。采用电磁搜索线圈技术测量眼位。视动刺激包括图案旋转的速度阶跃或正弦振荡。在双眼视觉中,对于高达20 - 40度/秒的图案速度,稳态阶跃响应的闭环增益(慢相眼速度/图案速度)在0.8至1.0之间,此后降低。开环增益(稳态慢相速度/视网膜滑移速度)取决于视网膜滑移速度,在双对数图中从约30(在0.5度/秒时)线性下降至约9(在5度/秒时)。对于大于5度/秒的视网膜滑移速度,开环增益衰减更快,在30度/秒时达到约1。阶跃响应曲线显示慢相眼速度逐渐增加,在与刺激速度大致成比例的时间段后达到稳态。在刺激开始后500毫秒内测量的初始慢相眼速度达到2至4度/秒,并且在大于10度/秒的刺激幅度下基本与刺激幅度无关。偶尔,大鼠在阶跃响应曲线开始时慢相眼速度会快速上升。存在原发性和继发性视动性眼震后效。原发性眼震后效的持续时间在很大程度上与刺激幅度无关,持续8.0±4秒。在单眼视觉中,对于颞鼻侧刺激,稳态阶跃响应的闭环增益与在双眼条件下测量的相似,而对于鼻颞侧刺激,即使在低刺激速度下增益也小得多。慢相速度的正弦调制与刺激速度呈线性相关;随着刺激频率增加,线性范围减小。慢相速度增益在0.05至0.3赫兹之间相对恒定(约0.8),并且在较大刺激频率下仅略有下降趋势。相位滞后随刺激频率强烈增加,并且可以通过假设100毫秒的响应时间延迟来拟合。结果表明,大鼠的视动系统在质量上与另一种侧眼物种即兔子的视动系统相似。然而,在数量水平上,大鼠的快速和慢速视动反应动力学似乎比兔子的发育得更好。(摘要截断于400字)