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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 75 (1989), S. 221-226 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Eye movements ; Smooth pursuit ; Vestibulo-ocular reflex ; Cancellation of the VOR ; Human ocular torsion
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Using the eye-coil/magnetic field method, we measured the torsional vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) in ten subjects during active head rotations in roll at about 0.5 Hz. In the dark, regardless of instructions or mental effort, the gains (eye velocity/ head velocity) had a mean value of around 0.61. When they viewed a visual display that was stationary, gains rose to 0.72. When viewing a visual display that moved in roll with their heads, subjects could decrease their gains to a mean of 0.46. Separate experiments showed that, as expected at this frequency, the optokinetic system made only a weak contribution. It has been proposed that the horizontal VOR is cancelled by the smooth pursuit system. Since there is no torsional pursuit system, some other mechanism must be used to augment or partially cancel the torsional VOR. Attempts to show that imagination could change this gain showed only weak effects. When asked to imagine an earth-fixed scene, gains were around 0.63; when asked to imagine a subject-fixed scene, gains decreased to only 0.60. When allowed to use a tactile contribution to aid the imagination in cancelling the VOR, the gain dropped further but only to 0.57. We conclude that mental effort in the dark has little influence on the torsional VOR but vision does by a mechanism that is not optokinetic or pursuit.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 113 (1997), S. 57-74 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Eye movements ; Vestibulo-ocular reflex ; Nucleus prepositus hypoglossi ; Neural integrator ; Neural network ; Monkey
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract An important part of the vestibulo-ocular reflex is a group of cells in the caudal pons, known as the neural integrator, that converts eye-velocity commands, from the semicircular canals for example, to eye-position commands for the motoneurons of the extraocular muscles. Previously, a recurrently connected neural network model was developed by us that learns to simulate the signal processing done by the neural integrator, but it uses an unphysiological learning algorithm. We describe here a new network model that can learn the same task by using a local, Hebbian-like learning algorithm that is physiologically plausible. Through the minimization of a retinal slip error signal the model learns, given randomly selected initial synaptic weights, to both integrate simulated push-pull semicircular canal afferent signals and compensate for orbital mechanics as well. Approximately half of the model’s 14 neurons are inhibitory, half excitatory. After learning, inhibitory cells tend to project contralaterally, thus forming an inhibitory commissure. The network can, of course, recover from lesions. The mature network is also able to change its gain by simulating abnormal visual-vestibular interactions. When trained with a sine wave at a single frequency, the network changed its gain at and near the training frequency but not at significantly higher or lower frequencies, in agreement with previous experimental observations. Commissural connections are essential to the functioning of this model, as was the case with our previous model. In order to determine whether a commissure plays a similar role in the real neural integrator, a series of electrical perturbations were performed on the midlines of awake, behaving juvenile rhesus monkeys and the effects on the monkeys’ eye movements were examined. Eye movements were recorded using the coil system before, during, and after electrical stimulation in the midline of the pons just caudal to the abducens nuclei, which reversibly made the integrator leaky. Eye movements were also recorded from two of the monkeys before and after a midline electrolytic lesion was made at the location where stimulation produced a leaky integrator. This lesion disabled the integrator irreversibly. The eye movements that were produced by the monkeys as a result of these perturbations were then compared with eye movements produced by the model after analogous perturbations. The results are compatible with the hypothesis that integration comes about by positive feedback through lateral inhibition effected by an inhibitory commissure.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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