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J Physiol Volume 546, Number 1, 207-224, January 1, 2003 DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2002.027797
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Journal of Physiology (2003), 546.1, pp. 207-224
© Copyright 2002 D 2003 The Physiological Society
DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2002.027797

Firing behaviour of squirrel monkey eye movement-related vestibular nucleus neurons during gaze saccades

Robert A. McCrea and Greg T. Gdowski

Department of Neurobiology, Pharmacology and Physiology, Committee on Neurobiology, University of Chicago, 5806 South Ellis Avenue, Chicago, IL 60637, USA

The firing behaviour of vestibular nucleus neurons putatively involved in producing the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) was studied during active and passive head movements in squirrel monkeys. Single unit recordings were obtained from 14 position-vestibular (PV) neurons, 30 position-vestibular-pause (PVP) neurons and 9 eye-head-vestibular (EHV) neurons. Neurons were sub-classified as type I or II based on whether they were excited or inhibited during ipsilateral head rotation. Different classes of cell exhibited distinctive responses during active head movements produced during and after gaze saccades. Type I PV cells were nearly as sensitive to active head movements as they were to passive head movements during saccades. Type II PV neurons were insensitive to active head movements both during and after gaze saccades. PVP and EHV neurons were insensitive to active head movements during saccadic gaze shifts, and exhibited asymmetric sensitivity to active head movements following the gaze shift. PVP neurons were less sensitive to ondirection head movements during the VOR after gaze saccades, while EHV neurons exhibited an enhanced sensitivity to head movements in their on direction. Vestibular signals related to the passive head movement were faithfully encoded by vestibular nucleus neurons. We conclude that central VOR pathway neurons are differentially sensitive to active and passive head movements both during and after gaze saccades due primarily to an input related to head movement motor commands. The convergence of motor and sensory reafferent inputs on VOR pathways provides a mechanism for separate control of eye and head movements during and after saccadic gaze shifts.



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