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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 4 April 2002, pp. 1836-1849
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Ophthalmology and 2Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, and 3College of Medical Technology, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-8638, Japan
Shinmei, Yasuhiro,
Takanobu Yamanobe,
Junko Fukushima, and
Kikuro Fukushima.
Purkinje Cells of the Cerebellar Dorsal Vermis: Simple-Spike
Activity During Pursuit and Passive Whole-Body Rotation. J. Neurophysiol. 87: 1836-1849, 2002. To
track a slowly moving object during whole body rotation, smooth-pursuit
and vestibularly induced eye movements must interact to maintain the
accuracy of eye movements in space (i.e., gaze), and gaze movement
signals must eventually be converted into eye movement signals in the
orbit. To understand the role played by the cerebellar vermis in
pursuit-vestibular interactions, in particular whether the output of
the vermis codes gaze-velocity or eye-velocity, we examined
simple-spike activity of 58 Purkinje (P-) cells in lobules VI-VII of
head-stabilized Japanese monkeys that were trained to elicit
smooth-pursuit eye movements and cancel their vestibuloocular reflex
(VOR) during passive whole body rotation around horizontal, vertical,
or oblique axes. All pursuit-sensitive vermal P-cells also responded
during VOR cancellation, and the majority of them had peak modulation
near peak stimulus velocity. The directions of maximum modulation
during these two tasks were distributed in all directions with a
downward preponderance. Using standard criteria, 40% of
pursuit-sensitive vermal P-cells were classified as gaze-velocity.
Other P-cells were classified either as eye/head-velocity group I
(36%) that had similar preferred directions during pursuit and VOR
cancellation but that had larger responses during VOR ×1 when gaze
remained stationary, or as eye/head-velocity group II (24%) that had
oppositely directed or orthogonal eye and head movement sensitivity
during pursuit and VOR cancellation. Eye/head-velocity group I P-cells
contained cells whose activity was correlated with eye velocity.
Modulation of many P-cells of the three groups during VOR ×1 could be
accounted for by the linear addition of their modulations during
pursuit and VOR cancellation. When monkeys fixated a stationary target,
over half of the P-cells tested, including gaze-velocity P-cells,
discharged in proportion to the velocity of retinal motion of a second
spot. These observations are in a striking contrast to our previous
results for floccular vertical P-cells. Because we used identical
tasks, these differences suggest that the two cerebellar regions are
involved in very different kinds of processing of pursuit-vestibular interactions.
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