Recordings from neurons of the vestibular nuclei were performed in alert monkeys. Type I and type II units were identified by rotating the monkey about a vertical axis. Al neurons responded also when only the visual surround was rotated around the stationary monkey. The combination of visual and ves
Vestibular-related neuronal activity in the thalamus of the alert monkey during sinusoidal rotation in the dark
✍ Scribed by U. Büttner; V. Henn; H. P. Oswald
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 559 KB
- Volume
- 30-30
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0014-4819
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
- In the alert monkey neuronal activity was recorded in the ventro-posterior nucleus (VP) of the thalamus in the dark during sinusoidal rotation over a frequency range from 0.01-1 Hz. 2. From 57 neurons 38 (67%) were activated with rotation to the ipsilateral side (type I) and 19 (33%) to the contralateral side (type II). The spontaneous activity was low (average 10.1 imp/sec) and irregular. No activity changes were found with eye movements. 3. At 0.2-0.1 Hz neuronal activity showed a phase lead of 10-20 degrees relative to chair velocity. At the lowest frequency (0.01 Hz) the phase lead was only slightly higher (about 30 degrees). Accordingly the decrease in gain was only moderate. 4. At lower frequencies the simultaneously recorded eye movements (nystagmus) showed an increase in phase lead comparable to the values for the neuronal activity in the thalamus. For both neuronal activity in the thalamus and nystagmus a time constant between 25-35 sec was calculated. 5. The data are compared with vestibular nerve and nuclei recordings. It is argued that the time constants of vestibular neurons in the thalamus are very similar to the time constants of neurons in the vestibular nuclei in alert animals.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Single neurons were recorded in the vestibular nuclei of monkeys trained to suppress nystagmus by visual fixation during vestibular or optokinetic stimulation. During optokinetic nystagmus vestibular nuclei neurons exhibit frequency changes. With the suppression of optokinetic nystagmus this neurona
Neurons which receive an input from the horizontal semicircular canals were recorded from the vestibular nuclei in chronically prepared monkeys (Macaca mulatta) during optokinetic after-nystagmus (OKAN). In complete darkness the vestibular neurons showed activity changes which closely paralleled the