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J Neurophysiol (November 1, 2002). 10.1152/jn.00796.2001
Submitted on 27 September 2001
Accepted on 15 July 2002
Department of Neurology, University of Zurich, 8091 Zurich, Switzerland
Misslisch, H. and
B.J.M. Hess.
Combined Influence of Vergence and Eye Position on
Three-Dimensional Vestibulo-Ocular Reflex in the Monkey. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 2368-2376, 2002. This study examined two
kinematical features of the rotational vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) of
the monkey in near vision. First, is there an effect of eye position on
the axes of eye rotation during yaw, pitch and roll head rotations when
the eyes are converged to fixate near targets? Second, do the
three-dimensional positions of the left and right eye during yaw and
roll head rotations obey the binocular extension of Listing's law
(L2), showing eye position planes that rotate temporally by a quarter
as far as the angle of horizontal vergence? Animals fixated near visual
targets requiring 17 or 8.5° vergence and placed at straight ahead,
20° up, down, left, or right during yaw, pitch, and roll head
rotations at 1 Hz. The 17° vergence experiments were performed both
with and without a structured visual background, the 8.5° vergence
experiments with a visual background only. A 40° horizontal change in
eye position never influenced the axis of eye rotation produced by the
VOR during pitch head rotation. Eye position did not affect the VOR eye
rotation axes, which stayed aligned with the yaw and roll head rotation
axes, when torsional gain was high. If torsional gain was low,
eccentric eye positions produced yaw and roll VOR eye rotation axes
that tilted somewhat in the directions predicted by Listing's law,
i.e., with or opposite to gaze during yaw or roll. These findings were
seen in both visual conditions and in both vergence experiments. During
yaw and roll head rotations with a 40° vertical change in gaze,
torsional eye position followed on average the prediction of L2: the
left eye showed counterclockwise (ex-) torsion in down gaze and
clockwise (in-) torsion in up gaze and vice versa for the right eye. In
other words, the left and right eye's position plane rotated
temporally by about a quarter of the horizontal vergence angle. Our
results indicate that torsional gain is the central mechanism by which
the brain adjusts the retinal image stabilizing function of the VOR
both in far and near vision and the three dimensional eye positions
during yaw and roll head rotations in near vision follow on average the
predictions of L2, a kinematic pattern that is maintained by the
saccadic/quick phase system.
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