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Experimental Tests of a Superposition Hypothesis to Explain the Relationship Between the Vestibuloocular Reflex and Smooth Pursuit During Horizontal Combined Eye-Head Tracking in Humans

机译:叠加假设的实验检验解释人眼水平组合眼头跟踪中前庭反射与平滑追踪的关系

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Authors used a modeling approach to test the hypothesis that, in humans, the Smooth Pursuit (SP) system provides the primary signal for canceling the Vestibuloocular Reflex (VOR) during Combined Eye-Head Tracking (CEHT) of a target moving smoothly in the horizontal plane. Separate models for SP and the VOR were developed. The optimal values of parameters of the two models were calculated using measured responses of four subjects to trials of SP and the visually enhanced VOR. After optimal parameter values were specified, each model generated waveforms that accurately reflected the subjects' responses to SP and vestibular stimuli. The models were then combined into a CEHT model wherein the final eye movement command signal was generated as the linear summation of the signals from the SP and VOR pathways. The SP-VOR superposition hypothesis was tested using two types of CEHT stimuli, both of which involved passive rotation of subjects in a vestibular chair. The first stimulus consisted of a 'chair brake' or sudden stop of the subject's head during CEHT; the visual target continued to move. The second stimulus consisted of a sudden change from the visually enhanced VOR to CEHT ('delayed target onset' paradigm; as the vestibular chair rotated past the angular position of the stationary visual stimulus, the latter started to move in synchrony with the chair. Data collected during experiments that employed these stimuli were compared quantitatively with predictions made by the CEHT model. During CEHT, when the chair was suddenly and unexpected stopped, the eye promptly began to move in the orbit to track the moving target. Initially, gaze velocity did not completely match target velocity, however; this finally occurred approx. 100 ms after the brake onset. The model did predict the prompt onset of eye-in-orbit motion after the brake, but it did not predict that gaze velocity would initially be only approx. 70 of target velocity. In conclusion, a linear superposition of SP and VOP signals accounts for most, but not all, aspects of CEHT during passive rotation of subjects in vestibular chair.

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