Human vestibular perceptual thresholds for pitch tilt are slightly worse than for roll tilt across a range of frequencies

被引:0
|
作者
Kadambari Suri
Torin K. Clark
机构
[1] University of Colorado-Boulder,Bioastronautics Laboratory, Smead Aerospace Engineering Sciences Department
来源
关键词
Perception; Signal detection theory; Human performance; Otolith organs; Semicircular canals;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Vestibular perceptual thresholds measure vestibular sensory and perceptual noise by quantifying how small of a passive self-motion an individual is able to reliably perceive. Vestibular thresholds have clinical and operational relevance, as they are elevated in vestibular migraine patients, and even healthy individuals with higher (i.e., worse) thresholds have degraded balance. Vestibular thresholds have been quantified across a range of frequencies (motion durations) for rotations and translations, with differences identified for different motion directions (e.g., up/down thresholds are higher than those for left/right motions). While roll tilt thresholds have been well quantified, pitch tilt thresholds have not. Here we aim to quantify pitch tilt thresholds across a range of frequencies and test whether they are higher than in those for roll tilt. In ten normal subjects, we found pitch tilt thresholds at 0.15, 0.2, 0.5, and 1 Hz averaged 1.66, 1.61, 0.99, 0.51 degrees, respectively. Using a general linear model, we found subjects’ pitch tilt thresholds were slightly, but significantly, higher than their roll tilt thresholds across all frequencies tested. These differences were approximately 10% at 0.15, 0.2, and 1 Hz and 3% at 0.5 Hz. Pitch tilt thresholds exhibited a similar frequency response as in roll tilt (decreasing a higher frequencies). They also had substantial inter-individual variability, which correlated across pitch tilt frequencies and between pitch and roll tilt thresholds. We discuss why pitch tilt thresholds might be higher, including the pitched-up orientation of the utricular plane of the otoliths, compared to previous studies, and discuss functional implications.
引用
收藏
页码:1499 / 1509
页数:10
相关论文
共 7 条
  • [1] Human vestibular perceptual thresholds for pitch tilt are slightly worse than for roll tilt across a range of frequencies
    Suri, Kadambari
    Clark, Torin K.
    EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 2020, 238 (06) : 1499 - 1509
  • [2] Tilt perception is different in the pitch and roll planes in human
    Serpollet, Dimitri Keriven
    Hartnagel, David
    James, Yannick
    Buffat, Stephane
    Vayatis, Nicolas
    Bargiotas, Ioannis
    Vidal, Pierre-Paul
    PHYSIOLOGICAL REPORTS, 2023, 11 (03):
  • [3] Vestibular perceptual thresholds for rotation about the yaw, roll, and pitch axes
    Aaron R. Allred
    Torin K. Clark
    Experimental Brain Research, 2023, 241 : 1101 - 1115
  • [4] Vestibular perceptual thresholds for rotation about the yaw, roll, and pitch axes
    Allred, Aaron R. R.
    Clark, Torin K. K.
    EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 2023, 241 (04) : 1101 - 1115
  • [5] Thresholds for Human Perception of Roll Tilt Motion: Patterns of Variability Based on Visual, Vestibular, and Mixed Cues
    Mardirossian, Vartan
    Karmali, Faisal
    Merfeld, Daniel
    OTOLOGY & NEUROTOLOGY, 2014, 35 (05) : 857 - 860
  • [6] Human perceptual overestimation of whole body roll tilt in hypergravity
    Clark, Torin K.
    Newman, Michael C.
    Oman, Charles M.
    Merfeld, Daniel M.
    Young, Laurence R.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2015, 113 (07) : 2062 - 2077
  • [7] Vestibular roll tilt thresholds partially mediate age-related effects on balance
    Beylergil, Sinem Balta
    Karmali, Faisal
    Wang, Wei
    Rey, Maria Carolina Bermudez
    Merfeld, Daniel M.
    MATHEMATICAL MODELLING IN MOTOR NEUROSCIENCE: STATE OF THE ART AND TRANSLATION TO THE CLINIC. OCULAR MOTOR PLANT AND GAZE STABILIZATION MECHANISMS, 2019, 248 : 249 - 267