Eye-position dependence of torsional velocity during step-ramp pursuit and transient yaw rotation in humans

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作者
Jing Tian
David S. Zee
Mark F. Walker
机构
[1] The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,Department of Neurology
[2] The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,Department of Ophthalmology
[3] The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,Department of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery
[4] The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,Department of Neuroscience
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Listing’s law; Torsion; Vestibulo-ocular reflex; Human;
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摘要
The time course of eye-position-dependent torsion during transient horizontal pursuit and yaw rotation was examined in seven normal human subjects. The stimuli consisted of step-ramp target motion (25, 40°/s) and brief chair rotation (~200°/s2 accelerated to 40°/s) at three different vertical positions (center 0°, up or down 15°). Three-dimensional eye movements were recorded with dual search coils. The kinematics of pursuit and the rotational vestibulo-ocular reflex (rVOR) were assessed by determining the tilt-angle slope, a measure of the variation of the axis of eye-velocity with vertical eye position. We found that the tilt-angle slope during pursuit was initially 0.4±0.07 (mean±95% confidence interval) and then gradually rose to 0.64±0.04, at about the time that the steady-state eye-velocity was reached. The rVOR began with a nearly head-fixed axis (0.08±0.04), appropriate for full retinal image stabilization, followed by a gradual increase of the tilt-angle slope to 0.31±0.02. Thus, differences between pursuit and the rVOR with respect to Listing’s law can be seen from the onset of transient responses, although in both cases eye-position-dependent torsion increases with time. This temporal evolution of the axis of eye-velocity may involve the velocity-storage mechanism.
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页码:225 / 230
页数:5
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