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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 2 August 2000, pp. 639-650
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
1Eye and Ear Research Unit, Department of Neurology, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Camperdown, NSW 2050, Sydney, Australia; and 2Institute of Neural and Intelligent Systems, Department of Computer and Information Science, Brooklyn College of City University of New York, Brooklyn, New York 11210
Thurtell, Matthew J.,
Mikhail Kunin, and
Theodore Raphan.
Role of Muscle Pulleys in Producing Eye Position-Dependence in
the Angular Vestibuloocular Reflex: A Model-Based Study. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 639-650, 2000. It is
well established that the head and eye velocity axes do not always
align during compensatory vestibular slow phases. It has been shown
that the eye velocity axis systematically tilts away from the head
velocity axis in a manner that is dependent on eye-in-head position.
The mechanisms responsible for producing these axis tilts are unclear.
In this model-based study, we aimed to determine whether muscle pulleys
could be involved in bringing about these phenomena. The model
presented incorporates semicircular canals, central vestibular
pathways, and an ocular motor plant with pulleys. The pulleys were
modeled so that they brought about a rotation of the torque axes of the
extraocular muscles that was a fraction of the angle of eye deviation
from primary position. The degree to which the pulleys rotated the
torque axes was altered by means of a pulley coefficient. Model input
was head velocity and initial eye position data from passive and active
yaw head impulses with fixation at 0°, 20° up and 20° down,
obtained from a previous experiment. The optimal pulley coefficient
required to fit the data was determined by calculating the mean square error between data and model predictions of torsional eye velocity. For
active head impulses, the optimal pulley coefficient varied considerably between subjects. The median optimal pulley coefficient was found to be 0.5, the pulley coefficient required for producing saccades that perfectly obey Listing's law when using a
two-dimensional saccadic pulse signal. The model predicted the
direction of the axis tilts observed in response to passive head
impulses from 50 ms after onset. During passive head impulses, the
median optimal pulley coefficient was found to be 0.21, when roll gain
was fixed at 0.7. The model did not accurately predict the alignment of the eye and head velocity axes that was observed early in the response
to passive head impulses. We found that this alignment could be well
predicted if the roll gain of the angular vestibuloocular reflex was
modified during the initial period of the response, while pulley
coefficient was maintained at 0.5. Hence a roll gain modification
allows stabilization of the retinal image without requiring a change in
the pulley effect. Our results therefore indicate that the eye
position-dependent velocity axis tilts could arise due to the effects
of the pulleys and that a roll gain modification in the central
vestibular structures may be responsible for countering the pulley effect.
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