Abstract
The vestibular system detects motion of the head in space and in turn generates reflexes that are vital for our daily activities. The eye movements produced by the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) play an essential role in stabilizing the visual axis (gaze), while vestibulo-spinal reflexes ensure the maintenance of head and body posture. The neuronal pathways from the vestibular periphery to the cervical spinal cord potentially serve a dual role, since they function to stabilize the head relative to inertial space and could thus contribute to gaze (eye-in-head + head-in-space) and posture stabilization. To date, however, the functional significance of vestibular-neck pathways in alert primates remains a matter of debate. Here we used a vestibular prosthesis to 1) quantify vestibularly-driven head movements in primates, and 2) assess whether these evoked head movements make a significant contribution to gaze as well as postural stabilization. We stimulated electrodes implanted in the horizontal semicircular canal of alert rhesus monkeys, and measured the head and eye movements evoked during a 100ms time period for which the contribution of longer latency voluntary inputs to the neck would be minimal. Our results show that prosthetic stimulation evoked significant head movements with latencies consistent with known vestibulo-spinal pathways. Furthermore, while the evoked head movements were substantially smaller than the coincidently evoked eye movements, they made a significant contribution to gaze stabilization, complementing the VOR to ensure that the appropriate gaze response is achieved. We speculate that analogous compensatory head movements will be evoked when implanted prosthetic devices are transitioned to human patients.
Highlights
The vestibular system detects head motion and produces reflexive movements in response to self-motion
We stimulated prosthetic electrodes targeted to the ampullary nerve innervating the horizontal semicircular canals, and simultaneously recorded head movements and vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) eye movement responses
We quantified the head movements evoked in alert rhesus monkey by vestibular prosthesis stimulation
Summary
The vestibular system detects head motion and produces reflexive movements in response to self-motion. Modeling studies in humans suggest that the head is mainly stabilized as a result of its passive biomechanical properties [12,13] These results are, in conflict with other studies showing that selective stimulation of a semicircular canal using sound [14,15] or electric current [16] can elicit substantial reflexive head rotation about the axis of that canal. Two important questions arise: first, does vestibular prosthesis stimulation evoke head in addition to eye movements in rhesus monkeys?, and second, do these vestibularly-driven head movements contribute to gaze stabilization and head posture?
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