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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 2 February 1999, pp. 735-757
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Psychology, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TP, United Kingdom
Optimality of position commands to horizontal eye muscles: a test of
the minimum-norm rule. Six muscles control the position of the
eye, which has three degrees of freedom. Daunicht proposed an
optimization rule for solving this redundancy problem, whereby small
changes in eye position are maintained by the minimum possible change
in motor commands to the eye (the minimum-norm rule). The present study
sought to test this proposal for the simplified one-dimensional case of
small changes in conjugate eye position in the horizontal plane.
Assuming such changes involve only the horizontal recti, Daunicht's
hypothesis predicts reciprocal innervation with the size of the change
in command matched to the strength of the recipient muscle at every
starting position of the eye. If the motor command to a muscle is
interpreted as the summed firing rate of its oculomotor neuron (OMN)
pool, the minimum-norm prediction can be tested by comparing OMN firing
rates with forces in the horizontal recti. The comparison showed
1) for the OMN firing rates given by Van Gisbergen and Van
Opstal and the muscle forces given by Robinson, there was good
agreement between the minimum-norm prediction and experimental
observation over about a ±30° range of eye positions. This fit was
robust with respect to variations in muscle stiffness and in methods of
calculating muscle innervation. 2) Other data sets gave
different estimates for the range of eye-positions within which the
minimum-norm prediction held. The main sources of variation appeared to
be disagreement about the proportion of OMNs with very low firing-rate
thresholds (i.e., less than ~35° in the OFF direction)
and uncertainty about eye-muscle behavior for extreme (>30°)
positions of the eye. 3) For all data sets, the range of eye
positions over which the minimum-norm rule applied was determined by
the pattern of motor-unit recruitment inferred for those data. It
corresponded to the range of eye positions over which the size
principle of recruitment was obeyed by both agonist and antagonist
muscles. It is argued that the current best estimate of the oculomotor
range over which minimum-norm control could be used for conjugate
horizontal eye position is approximately ±30°. The uncertainty
associated with this estimate would be reduced by obtaining unbiased
samples of OMN firing rates. Minimum-norm control may result from
reduction of the image movement produced by noise in OMN firing
rates.
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