Compensatory eye movements during active and passive head movements: fast adaptation to changes in visual magnification.
- 1 July 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 340 (1), 259-286
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1983.sp014762
Abstract
Rotational eye and head movements were recorded with great precision with scleral and cranial search coils in a rotating magnetic field. Compensatory eye movements were recorded in light and darkness during active as well as passive head movements in the frequency range 0.33-1.33 Hz. From the recorded, nominal gaze movements the effective gaze was reconstructed taking into account magnification or reduction factors of corrective spectacles. Effective gain was calculated as the ratio between the velocities of the effective corrective eye movements and the head movements. In the light, effective gain of compensatory eye movements during active head motion was mostly between 0.97 and 1.03. It was never precisely unity and differed systematically between subjects and between the 2 eyes of each subject. During passive head motion in the light, gain was lower by about 3% than during active motion. During active head movement in the dark, gain was mostly between 0.92 and 1.00; values were about 5% lower than during active motion in the light. During passive head movement in the dark, gain was about 13% lower than during active motion, and the variability of the oculomotor response increased. Adaptation of these base-line conditions was induced by fitting the subjects with magnifying or reducing spectacles for periods of 40 min to 24 h. The largest required change in amplitude eye movements was 36%. When active head movements were made, the amplitude of compensatory eye movements in the light as well as in the dark adjusted rapidly. Most of the adaptation of the vestibulo-ocular reflex in the dark was completed in about 30 min. This rate is much faster than that found in previous experiments requiring larger adaptive changes. Differential adaptation to unequal demands for the 2 eyes proved to be very hard or impossible. In a mild conflict situation the system adjusted to an intermediate level, distributing the error symmetrically between the eyes. When the discrepancy was large, thet adaptive process of both eyes was controlled by the 1 eye which provided the most meaningful information.This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Adaptive modification of the rabbit's horizontal vestibulo-ocular reflex during sustained vestibular and optokinetic stimulationExperimental Brain Research, 1979
- Cervical and Vestibular Afferent Control of Oculomotor Response in ManActa Oto-Laryngologica, 1979
- Gain of the vestibulo-ocular reflex in monkey at high rotational frequenciesVision Research, 1978
- Eye‐ and head movements in freely moving rabbits.The Journal of Physiology, 1977
- Adaptive gain control of vestibuloocular reflex by the cerebellumJournal of Neurophysiology, 1976
- Adaptation of cat vestibulo-ocular reflex to 200 days of optically reversed visionBrain Research, 1976
- Adaptation of the human vestibuloocular reflex to magnifying lensesBrain Research, 1975
- Precise recording of human eye movementsVision Research, 1975
- Adaptive plasticity in the vestibulo-ocular responses of the rhesus monkeyBrain Research, 1974
- Neural design of the cerebellar motor control systemBrain Research, 1972