Single-unit recordings of vestibular afferents from the semicircular canals of squirrel monkeys have shown that the cupular time constant (T(c)) is between 5 and 6 sec. Such recordings obviously cannot be performed in humans, and the corresponding values have thus been inferred to be somewhat longer based on their size and on the cupula-endolymph system. The ocular motor response of the rotational vestibule-ocular reflex (rVOR) is characterized by longer time constants, typically between 15 and 20 sec, due to the so-called velocity storage mechanism (VSM), which prolongs the time constant of the afferents through central processing. Recent studies have attempted to determine the time constant of the cupola by fitting the slow phase velocity (SPV) of the response to postrotational stimuli using a mathematical model of the rVOR processing. To this goal they considered the processing of head velocity due to the peripheral vestibular organs and to the VSM. The resulting estimates of T. are lower than expected, averaging about 4 sec. These modeling approaches, though, neglect both the processing of the final common pathway and the adaptation shown by the discharge of primary vestibular afferents. Here we argue that such an approach may be bound to underestimate the duration of the rVOR time constants.

Estimating the time constants of the rVOR. A model-based study.

RAMAT, STEFANO;BERTOLINI, GIOVANNI
2009-01-01

Abstract

Single-unit recordings of vestibular afferents from the semicircular canals of squirrel monkeys have shown that the cupular time constant (T(c)) is between 5 and 6 sec. Such recordings obviously cannot be performed in humans, and the corresponding values have thus been inferred to be somewhat longer based on their size and on the cupula-endolymph system. The ocular motor response of the rotational vestibule-ocular reflex (rVOR) is characterized by longer time constants, typically between 15 and 20 sec, due to the so-called velocity storage mechanism (VSM), which prolongs the time constant of the afferents through central processing. Recent studies have attempted to determine the time constant of the cupola by fitting the slow phase velocity (SPV) of the response to postrotational stimuli using a mathematical model of the rVOR processing. To this goal they considered the processing of head velocity due to the peripheral vestibular organs and to the VSM. The resulting estimates of T. are lower than expected, averaging about 4 sec. These modeling approaches, though, neglect both the processing of the final common pathway and the adaptation shown by the discharge of primary vestibular afferents. Here we argue that such an approach may be bound to underestimate the duration of the rVOR time constants.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/205277
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