Abstract
We examined the effect of conflicting vestibular and smooth pursuit information on the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) in alert monkeys. Sinusoidal whole body rotation was applied either in the pitch or yaw plane while presenting a target spot that moved orthogonally to the rotation plane. The monkeys were rewarded for tracking the spot and eye movements induced by rotation alone were examined every 15–30 min in complete darkness. Orthogonal eye movement responses to rotation were not observed before training but appeared after about 30 min of training. The gains (eye/chair) of the orthogonal component increased up to 0.2 after 1–2 h and were largest at the training frequency and approximately in phase with the stimulus; phase advanced at lower frequencies and lagged at higher frequencies. Amplitude tuning was also demonstrated when examined using different amplitudes at a constant frequency after training. Two hours of training to fixate an earth-stationary spot projected onto a patterned visual background that moved orthogonally to the rotation plane during rotation, did not induce a cross axis response. These results indicate that pursuit training during VOR is effective in inducing cross-axis eye movement responses that are tuned to the metrics of the training stimulus.
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