Marsh E, Baker R
Department of Physiology and Neuroscience, New York University Medical Center, New York 10016, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 1997 Mar;77(3):1099-118. doi: 10.1152/jn.1997.77.3.1099.
Under normal physiological conditions, whole field visual motion generally occurs in response to either active or passive self-motion. In the laboratory, selective movement of the visual surround produces an optokinetic response (OKR) that acts primarily to support the vestibuloocular reflex (VOR). During visual world motion, however, the OKR can be viewed as operating independently over frequency and amplitude ranges insufficient for vestibular activation. The goal of the present study was to characterize this isolated behavior of the OKR in goldfish as an essential step for studying central neuronal correlates of visual-vestibular interactions and the mechanisms underlying oculomotor adaptation. After presentation of either binocular sinusoidal or step visual stimuli, conjugate eye movements were elicited with an amplitude and phase profile similar to that of other vertebrates. An early and a delayed component were measured with different dynamics that could be altered independently by visual training. The ensuing visuomotor plasticity was robust and exhibited five major characteristics. First, the gain of both early and delayed components of the OKR increased > 100%. Second, eye velocity decreased 0.5-2.0 s before the change in direction of stimulus velocity. Third, on lengthening the duration of a constant velocity visual stimulus (e.g., from 8 to 16 s), eye velocity decreased toward 0 degrees/s. This behavior was correlated with the direction and period as opposed to the frequency of the visual stimulus ("period tuning"). Fourth, visual stimulus training increased VOR eye velocity with a ratio of 0.6 to 1 to that measured for the OKR. Fifth, the OKR adaptation, eye velocity consistently oscillated in a conjugate, symmetrical fashion at 2.4 Hz in the light, whereas in the dark, a rhythmical low-amplitude eye velocity occurred at the visual training frequency. We conclude that the frequency and amplitude of visual stimuli for eliciting the goldfish OKR are well suited for complementing the VOR. Unlike most mammals, OKR adaptive modifications significantly alter VOR gain, whereas the effects of VOR training are much less on OKR gain. These observations suggest that both distributed circuits and discrete neuronal populations control visuo- and vestibulomotor performance. Finally, the existence of a rhythmic, "period tuned" visuomotor behavior provides a unique opportunity to examine the neuronal mechanisms of adaptive plasticity.
在正常生理条件下,全视野视觉运动通常是对主动或被动自身运动的反应。在实验室中,视觉环境的选择性运动产生视动反应(OKR),其主要作用是支持前庭眼反射(VOR)。然而,在视觉世界运动期间,OKR可被视为在不足以激活前庭的频率和幅度范围内独立运作。本研究的目的是将金鱼中OKR的这种孤立行为表征为研究视觉 - 前庭相互作用的中枢神经元相关性以及眼球运动适应潜在机制的重要一步。在呈现双眼正弦或阶跃视觉刺激后,诱发的共轭眼球运动具有与其他脊椎动物相似的幅度和相位特征。通过不同的动力学测量了一个早期成分和一个延迟成分,它们可通过视觉训练独立改变。随后的视觉运动可塑性很强,并表现出五个主要特征。首先,OKR早期和延迟成分的增益增加超过100%。其次,在刺激速度方向改变前0.5 - 2.0秒,眼球速度下降。第三,在延长恒定速度视觉刺激的持续时间(例如,从8秒延长到16秒)时,眼球速度向0度/秒下降。这种行为与视觉刺激的方向和周期相关,而不是与频率相关(“周期调谐”)。第四,视觉刺激训练使VOR眼球速度增加,与OKR测量值的比例为0.6比1。第五,OKR适应后,在光照下,眼球速度始终以2.4赫兹的共轭、对称方式振荡,而在黑暗中,在视觉训练频率下出现有节奏的低幅度眼球速度。我们得出结论,用于诱发金鱼OKR的视觉刺激的频率和幅度非常适合补充VOR。与大多数哺乳动物不同,OKR适应性改变会显著改变VOR增益,而VOR训练对OKR增益的影响则小得多。这些观察结果表明,分布式回路和离散的神经元群体都控制着视觉和前庭运动性能。最后,有节奏的“周期调谐”视觉运动行为的存在为研究适应性可塑性的神经元机制提供了独特的机会。