The cerebellum and sensorimotor coupling: Looking at the problem from the perspective of vestibular reflexes

2007 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Manzoni
1983 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 688-695 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Ezure ◽  
V. J. Wilson

We have studied the neck-to-forelimb reflex evoked by head rotation around the longitudinal axis (roll) in the long and medial heads of triceps brachii of decerebrate, acutely labyrinthectomized cats. Reflexes were measured by recording mass electromyogram (EMG). As expected from the work of others, they were reciprocal in the two limbs, with excitation in the limb toward which the chin rotates. The reflex was sufficiently linear for a sinusoidal analysis. Although there was sometimes adaptation at stimulus frequencies of 0.1 Hz and below, response phase at these frequencies was usually in phase with position, and gain was flat. At higher frequencies there was some sensitivity to the velocity of the stimulus: gain increased with a slope of 10 dB/decade and phase advanced in some cats but not in others. Gain at low frequencies of head rotation, expressed as percent modulation of EMG, was typically 1%/deg or less. Reflexes evoked by head rotation in triceps and in the neck extensor splenius capitis have different dynamics. It remains to be determined whether this difference is due to activation of different receptors. We compared the dynamics of roll reflexes evoked by stimulation of neck receptors with those of vestibular reflexes evoked by tilt of the whole animal (23). Taking into account dynamics and gain, the two reflexes should cancel at low frequencies, as predicted by others. Above 0.2 Hz, cancellation becomes less effective.


2011 ◽  
Vol 111 (5) ◽  
pp. 1484-1490 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Sébastien Blouin ◽  
Christopher J. Dakin ◽  
Kees van den Doel ◽  
Romeo Chua ◽  
Bradford J. McFadyen ◽  
...  

Daily activities, such as walking, may require dynamic modulation of vestibular input onto motoneurons. This dynamic modulation is difficult to identify in humans due to limitations in the delivery and analysis of current vestibular probes, such as galvanic vestibular stimulation. Stochastic vestibular stimulation, however, provides an alternative method to extract human vestibular reflexes. Here, we used time-dependent coherence and time-dependent cross-correlation, coupled with stochastic vestibular stimulation, to investigate the phase dependency of human vestibular reflexes during locomotion. We found that phase-dependent activity from the medial gastrocnemius muscles is correlated with the vestibular signals over the 2- to 20-Hz bandwidth during the stance phase of locomotion. Vestibular-gastrocnemius coherence and time-dependent cross-correlations reached maximums at 21 ± 4 and 23 ± 8% of the step cycle following heel contact and before the period of maximal electromyographic activity (38 ± 5%). These results demonstrate 1) the effectiveness of these techniques in extracting the phase-dependent modulation of vestibulomuscular coupling during a cyclic task; 2) that vestibulomuscular coupling is phasically modulated during locomotion; and 3) that the period of strongest vestibulomuscular coupling does not correspond to the period of maximal electromyographic activity in the gastrocnemius. Therefore, we have shown that stochastic vestibular stimulation, coupled with time-frequency decomposition, provides an effective tool to assess the contribution of vestibular ex-afference to the muscular control during locomotion.


Author(s):  
Miguel Aguilera ◽  
Manuel G. Bedia ◽  
Xabier E. Barandiaran

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