头部稳定表现出对视觉和惯性被动刺激时空特征的多感官依赖

W. Wright, M. Agah, K. Darvish, E. Keshner
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引用次数: 2

摘要

感觉运动协调依赖于视觉、前庭和体感输入之间相互作用的精细校准。我们的目标是研究被动惯性运动和视觉输入的时空特性如何影响头部稳定。健康的年轻人(n=12)在整个身体的a /P正弦水平平移期间佩戴头戴式显示器。视觉状态(VIS)显示了相对于头部的向前(EO)、侧向(SW)或向后(BW)视觉运动,加上闭眼状态(EC),这些状态与4种惯性状态相结合,总共包含16种状态。在SW中,可以显示近距离或远距离的180°相移的景深。受试者被固定在座位上,头部可以自由活动。频率和振幅正弦输入包括重叠的最大加速度(amax)或最大速度(vmax)。用三轴陀螺仪采集角速度的幅值和相位。研究发现,惯性条件对头部运动各轴幅值的主要影响(p<.0000),以及随着频率的增加(121°,127°,83°,- 32°),头部俯仰从相位导到滞后的偏移(p<.0000)。VIS对头距的主要影响(p<0.01)是由于视觉缺失(EC)。惯性和VIS条件对头偏航的相互作用与SW发生(p<0.05)。在SW中,景深和惯性对头部偏航的振幅(p<0.001)和相位(p<0.05)发生了显著的相互作用,特别是在高vmax条件下。因此,视觉流可以组织侧颈反应,尽管与惯性输入不一致。
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Head stabilization shows multisensory dependence on spatiotemporal characteristics of visual and inertial passive stimulation
Sensorimotor coordination relies on fine calibration of the interaction among visual, vestibular, and somatosensory input. Our goal was to investigate how the spatiotemporal properties of passive inertial motion and visual input affect head stabilization. Healthy young adults (n=12) wore a head-mounted display during A/P sinusoidal horizontal translations of the whole body. Visual conditions (VIS) displayed forward (EO), sideways (SW), or backward (BW) visual motion relative to the head, plus an eyes-closed conditions (EC) which were combined with 4 inertial conditions to comprise 16 conditions in total. In SW either near or far DEPTH of field with 180° phase shift was displayed. Subjects were secured in a seat with head free to move. Frequency and amplitude of sinusoidal input included overlapping max acceleration (amax) or max velocity (vmax). Amplitude and phase of angular velocity was collected with a 3-axis gyro. A main effect of inertial condition on amplitude for all axes of head motion (p<.0000) and a shift (p<.0000) from phase lead to lag of head pitch with increasing freq (121°, 127°, 83°, −32°) were found. A main effect of VIS on head pitch (p<0.01) was due to the absence of vision (EC). An interaction effect between inertial and VIS conditions on head yaw occurred with SW (p<0.05). In SW, a significant interaction of depth of field and inertia on amplitude (p<0.001) and phase (p<0.05) of head yaw occurred, especially during high vmax conditions. Thus, visual flow can organize lateral cervical responses despite being discordant with inertial input.
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