Differential visual adaptation of vertical canal-dependent vestibulo-ocular reflexes

A Berthoz, G Melvill Jones, AE Bégué - Experimental Brain Research, 1981 - Springer
A Berthoz, G Melvill Jones, AE Bégué
Experimental Brain Research, 1981Springer
Reversing vision in the horizontal (left-right) plane in humans induces adaptive mechanisms
and even reversal of the horizontal vestibulo-ocular reflex (HVOR). The present experiments
were aimed at investigating if such adaptive modifications could be observed in the frontal
plane by reversal of the torsional visual world movements. Torsional vestibulo-ocular reflex
(TVOR) was measured in one subject who wore Dove prisms for 19 days. The gain of TVOR
was tested in the dark with the head leaned backward and rotating around an earth vertical …
Summary
Reversing vision in the horizontal (left-right) plane in humans induces adaptive mechanisms and even reversal of the horizontal vestibulo-ocular reflex (HVOR). The present experiments were aimed at investigating if such adaptive modifications could be observed in the frontal plane by reversal of the torsional visual world movements. Torsional vestibulo-ocular reflex (TVOR) was measured in one subject who wore Dove prisms for 19 days. The gain of TVOR was tested in the dark with the head leaned backward and rotating around an earth vertical axis with sinusoidal rotation (1/6 Hz). The gain decreased from 0.27 to 0.13 at 70 ° peak-to-peak amplitude, and from 0.3 to 0.11 at 45 ° peak-to-peak amplitude after 19 days of prism-wearing. Full gain recovery was observed 10 days after prism removal. The results are compared with the observation that in the same situation the vertical VOR (up-down) is not reversed (Dove prisms do not reverse visual images in this plane). As the same four (vertical) canals produce both reflexes, it is suggested that central neuronal mechanisms allow the recognition of the geometrical pattern of visual reversals and selectively adapt the reflex in the relevant planes.
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