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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 1 July 2001, pp. 113-122
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Neurology, Zurich University Hospital, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland
Bergamin, O. and
D. Straumann.
Three-Dimensional Binocular Kinematics of Torsional Vestibular
Nystagmus During Convergence on Head-Fixed Targets in Humans. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 113-122, 2001. When a human subject is oscillated about the nasooccipital axis and
fixes upon targets along the horizontal head-fixed meridian, angular
eye velocity includes a vertical component that increases with the
horizontal eccentricity of the line-of-sight. This vertical eye
movement component is necessary to prevent retinal slip. We asked
whether fixation on a near head-fixed target during the same torsional
vestibular stimulation would lead to differences of vertical eye
movements between the right and the left eye, as the directions of the
two lines-of-sight are not parallel during convergence. Healthy human
subjects (n = 6) were oscillated (0.3 Hz, ±30°)
about the nasooccipital axis on a three-dimensional motor-driven
turntable. Binocular movements were recorded using the dual search coil
technique. A head-fixed laser dot was presented 1.4 m (far
head-fixed target) or 0.25 m (near head-fixed target) in front of
the right eye. We found highly significant (P < 0.01) correlations (R binocular = 0.8, monocular = 0.59) between
the convergence angle and the difference of the vertical eye velocity between the two eyes. The slope of the fitted linear regression between
the two parameters (s = 0.45) was close to the
theoretical slope necessary to prevent vertical retinal slippage
(predicted s = 0.5). Covering the left eye did not
significantly change the slope (s = 0.52). In addition,
there was a marked gain reduction (~35%) of the torsional
vestibuloocular reflex (VOR) between viewing the far and the near
targets, confirming earlier results by others. There was no difference
in torsional gain reduction between the two eyes. Lenses of +3 dpt
positioned in front of both eyes to decrease the amount of
accommodation did not further change the gain of the torsional VOR. In
conclusion, ocular convergence on a near head-fixed target during
torsional vestibular stimulation leads to deviations in vertical
angular velocity between the two eyes necessary to prevent vertical
double vision. The vertical deviation velocity is mainly linked to the
amount of convergence, since it also occurs during monocular viewing of
the near head-fixed target. This suggests that convergence during
vestibular stimulation automatically leads to an alignment of binocular
rotation axes with the visual axes independent of retinal slip.
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