The instantaneous training demand drives vestibulo-ocular reflex adaptation

被引:2
|
作者
Figtree, William V. C. [1 ]
Schubert, Michael C. [3 ,4 ]
Rinaudo, Carlo N. [1 ,2 ]
Migliaccio, Americo A. [1 ,2 ,5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Neurosci Res Australia, Balance & Vis Lab, Cnr Barker St & Easy St, Sydney, NSW 2031, Australia
[2] Univ New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2033, Australia
[3] Johns Hopkins Univ, Lab Vestibular NeuroAdaptat, Dept Otolaryngol Head & Neck Surg, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA
[4] Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Phys Med & Rehabil, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA
[5] Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Otolaryngol Head & Neck Surg, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA
[6] Univ Newcastle, Sch Biomed Sci & Pharm, Newcastle, NSW, Australia
关键词
Vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR); VOR latency; VOR adaptation; VOR training with latency added gain demand; HIGH-ACCELERATION ROTATIONS; VERGENCE-MEDIATED MODULATION; SQUIRREL-MONKEY; SELECTIVE ADAPTATION; HIGH-FREQUENCY; RESPONSES; VELOCITY; DYNAMICS;
D O I
10.1007/s00221-020-05953-1
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
The vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) maintains stable vision during rapid head rotations by rotating the eyes in the opposite direction to the head. The latency between onset of the head rotation and onset of the eye rotation is 5-8 ms in healthy humans. However, VOR latency can be 3-4 times larger in patients treated with intra-tympanic gentamicin. A prior study showed that latency can be trained with head rotations at 0.2 Hz. We sought to determine how the VOR is affected when a delay between vestibular and visual stimuli is added during adaptation training with high-frequency head rotations (impulses), where the VOR is the main vision-stabilizing system. Using a variant of the incremental VOR adaptation technique, the delay between head rotation onset and movement onset of a visual target was gradually increased. With this training, the instantaneous VOR gain demand (= target/head velocity) varied from less than unity to greater than unity during each head impulse, albeit in a consistent and repeatable way. We measured the active and passive VOR gain and latency before and after VOR adaptation training in healthy normal subjects. There was no significant change in VOR latency across subjects; however, there was a significant decrease in VOR gain of - 6.0 +/- 4.5%. These data suggest that during high-frequency head rotations delay/latency is interpreted as a changing instantaneous VOR gain demand. Although the gain demand in this study had a complex trajectory, adaptation was evident with the VOR seeming to use an average of the instantaneous gain demand.
引用
收藏
页码:2965 / 2972
页数:8
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