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Prolonged asymmetric vestibular stimulation induces opposite, long‐term effects on self‐motion perception and ocular responses

Key points •  The semicircular canals of the labyrinths are a source of information for self‐motion perception and reflex eye movements. •  Prolonged vestibular asymmetric stimulation of standing humans about the earth‐vertical axis, made of fast body rotation to one side and slow rotation to the ot...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Journal of physiology 2013-04, Vol.591 (7), p.1907-1920
Main Authors: Pettorossi, V. E., Panichi, R., Botti, F. M., Kyriakareli, A., Ferraresi, A., Faralli, M., Schieppati, M., Bronstein, A. M.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Key points •  The semicircular canals of the labyrinths are a source of information for self‐motion perception and reflex eye movements. •  Prolonged vestibular asymmetric stimulation of standing humans about the earth‐vertical axis, made of fast body rotation to one side and slow rotation to the other side, induced different adaptive mechanisms in the perception of body motion and in the vestibulo‐ocular reflex (VOR). •  Motion perception became progressively more asymmetric, increasing gradually in response to the fast body rotation and decreasing in response to the slow rotation. VOR became gradually more symmetric, decreasing for fast body movement and increasing for slow movement. •  These oppositely directed adaptive effects in motion perception and VOR persisted for at least 30 min. •  Long‐lasting asymmetric stimulation discloses independent brain mechanisms for perception of body motion and eye movement control. •  These adaptive mechanisms may enhance awareness toward the side where the body is moving faster, while improving eye stabilizing properties of the VOR.   Self‐motion perception and the vestibulo‐ocular reflex (VOR) were investigated in healthy subjects during asymmetric whole body yaw plane oscillations while standing on a platform in the dark. Platform oscillation consisted of two half‐sinusoidal cycles of the same amplitude (40°) but different duration, featuring a fast (FHC) and a slow half‐cycle (SHC). Rotation consisted of four or 20 consecutive cycles to probe adaptation further with the longer duration protocol. Self‐motion perception was estimated by subjects tracking with a pointer the remembered position of an earth‐fixed visual target. VOR was measured by electro‐oculography. The asymmetric stimulation pattern consistently induced a progressive increase of asymmetry in motion perception, whereby the gain of the tracking response gradually increased during FHCs and decreased during SHCs. The effect was observed already during the first few cycles and further increased during 20 cycles, leading to a totally distorted location of the initial straight‐ahead. In contrast, after some initial interindividual variability, the gain of the slow phase VOR became symmetric, decreasing for FHCs and increasing for SHCs. These oppositely directed adaptive effects in motion perception and VOR persisted for nearly an hour. Control conditions using prolonged but symmetrical stimuli produced no adaptive effects on either motion perception or VO
ISSN:0022-3751
1469-7793
DOI:10.1113/jphysiol.2012.241182