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J Neurophysiol (November 1, 2002). 10.1152/jn.00197.222
Submitted on 18 March 2002
Accepted on 1 July 2002
1Department of Neurology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York City 10029; and 2Department of Computer and Information Science, Brooklyn College, City University of New York, Brooklyn, New York 11210
Kushiro, Keisuke,
Mingjia Dai,
Mikhail Kunin,
Sergei B. Yakushin,
Bernard Cohen, and
Theodore Raphan.
Compensatory and Orienting Eye Movements Induced By
Off-Vertical Axis Rotation (OVAR) in Monkeys. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 2445-2462, 2002. Nystagmus induced by off-vertical
axis rotation (OVAR) about a head yaw axis is composed of a yaw bias
velocity and modulations in eye position and velocity as the head
changes orientation relative to gravity. The bias velocity is dependent
on the tilt of the rotational axis relative to gravity and angular head
velocity. For axis tilts <15°, bias velocities increased
monotonically with increases in the magnitude of the projected gravity
vector onto the horizontal plane of the head. For tilts of 15-90°,
bias velocity was independent of tilt angle, increasing linearly as a
function of head velocity with gains of 0.7-0.8, up to the saturation
level of velocity storage. Asymmetries in OVAR bias velocity and
asymmetries in the dominant time constant of the angular
vestibuloocular reflex (aVOR) covaried and both were reduced by
administration of baclofen, a GABAB agonist.
Modulations in pitch and roll eye positions were in phase with
nose-down and side-down head positions, respectively. Changes in roll
eye position were produced mainly by slow movements, whereas vertical
eye position changes were characterized by slow eye movements and
saccades. Oscillations in vertical and roll eye velocities led their
respective position changes by
90°, close to an ideal
differentiation, suggesting that these modulations were due to
activation of the orienting component of the linear vestibuloocular
reflex (lVOR). The beating field of the horizontal nystagmus shifted
the eyes 6.3°/g toward gravity in side down position,
similar to the deviations observed during static roll tilt
(7.0°/g). This demonstrates that the eyes also orient to gravity in yaw. Phases of horizontal eye velocity clustered ~180° relative to the modulation in beating field and were not simply differentiations of changes in eye position. Contributions of orientating and compensatory components of the lVOR to the modulation of eye position and velocity were modeled using three components: a
novel direct otolith-oculomotor orientation, orientation-based velocity
modulation, and changes in velocity storage time constants with head
position re gravity. Time constants were obtained from optokinetic
after-nystagmus, a direct representation of velocity storage. When
the orienting lVOR was combined with models of the compensatory lVOR
and velocity estimator from sequential otolith activation to generate
the bias component, the model accurately predicted eye position and
velocity in three dimensions. These data support the postulates
that OVAR generates compensatory eye velocity through activation of
velocity storage and that oscillatory components arise predominantly
through lVOR orientation mechanisms.
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