Peterka R J, Benolken M S
R. S. Dow Neurological Sciences Institute, Legacy Good Samaritan Hospital, Portland, OR 97210, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 1995;105(1):101-10. doi: 10.1007/BF00242186.
The purpose of this study was to determine the contribution of visual, vestibular, and somatosensory cues to the maintenance of stance in humans. Postural sway was induced by full-field, sinusoidal visual surround rotations about an axis at the level of the ankle joints. The influences of vestibular and somatosensory cues were characterized by comparing postural sway in normal and bilateral vestibular absent subjects in conditions that provided either accurate or inaccurate somatosensory orientation information. In normal subjects, the amplitude of visually induced sway reached a saturation level as stimulus amplitude increased. The saturation amplitude decreased with increasing stimulus frequency. No saturation phenomena were observed in subjects with vestibular loss, implying that vestibular cues were responsible for the saturation phenomenon. For visually induced sways below the saturation level, the stimulus-response curves for both normal subjects and subjects experiencing vestibular loss were nearly identical, implying (1) that normal subjects were not using vestibular information to attenuate their visually induced sway, possibly because sway was below a vestibular-related threshold level, and (2) that subjects with vestibular loss did not utilize visual cues to a greater extent than normal subjects; that is, a fundamental change in visual system "gain" was not used to compensate for a vestibular deficit. An unexpected finding was that the amplitude of body sway induced by visual surround motion could be almost 3 times greater than the amplitude of the visual stimulus in normal subjects and subjects with vestibular loss. This occurred in conditions where somatosensory cues were inaccurate and at low stimulus amplitudes. A control system model of visually induced postural sway was developed to explain this finding. For both subject groups, the amplitude of visually induced sway was smaller by a factor of about 4 in tests where somatosensory cues provided accurate versus inaccurate orientation information. This implied (1) that the subjects experiencing vestibular loss did not utilize somatosensory cues to a greater extent than normal subjects; that is, changes in somatosensory system "gain" were not used to compensate for a vestibular deficit, and (2) that the threshold for the use of vestibular cues in normal subjects was apparently lower in test conditions where somatosensory cues were providing accurate orientation information.
本研究的目的是确定视觉、前庭和本体感觉线索对人类维持姿势的作用。通过围绕踝关节水平轴进行全场正弦视觉环绕旋转来诱发姿势摆动。通过比较正常受试者和双侧前庭缺失受试者在提供准确或不准确本体感觉方向信息的条件下的姿势摆动,来表征前庭和本体感觉线索的影响。在正常受试者中,随着刺激幅度增加,视觉诱发摆动的幅度达到饱和水平。饱和幅度随刺激频率增加而减小。在前庭丧失的受试者中未观察到饱和现象,这意味着前庭线索是造成饱和现象的原因。对于低于饱和水平的视觉诱发摆动,正常受试者和前庭丧失受试者的刺激 - 反应曲线几乎相同,这意味着:(1)正常受试者未使用前庭信息来减弱其视觉诱发摆动,可能是因为摆动低于前庭相关阈值水平;(2)前庭丧失的受试者并未比正常受试者更多地利用视觉线索;也就是说,视觉系统“增益”的根本变化未被用于补偿前庭缺陷。一个意外发现是,在正常受试者和前庭丧失受试者中,视觉环绕运动诱发的身体摆动幅度可能比视觉刺激幅度大近3倍。这发生在本体感觉线索不准确且刺激幅度较低的情况下。建立了视觉诱发姿势摆动的控制系统模型来解释这一发现。对于两个受试者组,在本体感觉线索提供准确与不准确方向信息的测试中,视觉诱发摆动的幅度小约4倍。这意味着:(1)前庭丧失的受试者并未比正常受试者更多地利用本体感觉线索;也就是说,本体感觉系统“增益”的变化未被用于补偿前庭缺陷;(2)在本体感觉线索提供准确方向信息的测试条件下,正常受试者使用前庭线索的阈值明显更低。