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1From the Departments of Surgery (Division of Otolaryngology), 2Ophthalmology, 3Neurology, 4Neuroscience, and 5Bioengineering Interdepartmental Programs, University of California, Los Angeles, California.
| Abstract |
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METHODS. Binocular eye and head motions were recorded with magnetic search coils in eight humans. With the head immobile, LP was determined for each eye, and mean TAR was 0.50 ± 0.07 (mean ± SD) for horizontal and 0.45 ± 0.11 for vertical saccades. The VOR was evoked by transient, whole-body yaw at 2800 deg/s2 peak acceleration, capable of evoking large, uninterrupted VOR slow phases. Before rotation, subjects viewed a target at eye level, 20° up, or 20° down. In two thirds of the trials, the target moved upward or downward at systematically varying times, triggering a vertical saccade during the horizontal VOR slow phase.
RESULTS. Because the head rotation axis was generally misaligned with LP, the eye averaged 3.6° out of LP at vertical saccade onset. During the saccade, eye position continued to depart LP by an average 0.8°. The horizontal TAR at saccade onset was 0.29 ± 0.07. At peak saccade velocity 35 ± 3 ms later, the vertical TAR was 0.45 ± 0.07, statistically similar to that of head fixed saccades. Saccades did not return to LP.
CONCLUSIONS. Although they did not observe the position domain formulation of LL, vertical saccades, during the VOR, observed the half-angle velocity domain formulation of LL.
Although LL is well known to prevail during saccades and pursuit with the head immobile,5 LL is violated by the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR).6 7 8 Violation of LL during the VOR is not surprising, given that the VORs role is to compensate for head rotation about any arbitrary axis and so stabilize images of fixed objects on the retina. Because natural head motion occurs in all three DF,9 an ideal VOR should compensate for head rotation about any axis, without dependency of ocular torsion on eye position in the orbit as implied by LL. The ideal TAR for the VOR would be zero. When tested in the position domain, eye rotation roughly mirrors head rotation around a generous range of axes in both monkey10 and human.11 12 However, ocular torsion during the VOR depends on eye position in the orbit. When eye rotation is examined in the velocity domain, it is apparent that VOR axis shifts by approximately one quarter of the angle of eye position change relative to the head, corresponding to a TAR near 0.25.6 7 8 This quarter-angle shift in the velocity domain is only half the shift predicted by LL; hence, the VOR violates LL in both the position and velocity domains.
The roles of neural and mechanical factors in determination of ocular kinematics are not fully understood. Before modern descriptions of orbital connective tissue anatomy, it seemed likely that all aspects of LL were implemented neurally in premotor circuits as an intrinsic feature of central ocular motor control.13 14 15 Miller and Demer16 proposed that pulleys could constrain rectus extraocular muscle (EOM) paths so as to make EOM pulling directions dependent on eye position. It has subsequently emerged that the rectus EOMs have connective tissue soft pulleys17 that receive insertions from the orbital layer of each rectus EOM, so that the pulley moves in coordination with the globe to change the EOM pulling direction by half the change in eye position.18 19 Because 3-D eye velocity is imparted by the direction of EOM force, the mechanical arrangement of the rectus EOM pulleys appears to account for the TAR of 0.5 required by the velocity domain formulation of LL without any explicit central computation of eye torsion.20 21 However, physiologic violations of LL have continued to suggest a role for central neural control of 3-D ocular kinematics.22 For example, during convergence, both eyes extort,23 and LP for each eye rotates temporally.24 25 The ocular extorsion in central gaze is associated with torsional repositioning of the rectus EOM pulley array by the oblique EOMs, and the temporal rotation of LP appears to require that this effect be neurally modulated as a function of vertical gaze position.23 The finding that the eye velocity axis follows half-angle behavior during pursuit and saccades but quarter-angle behavior during the VOR also implies that there must also be neuronal control of the ocular axis. The mechanism of this interaction has yet to be clarified.
Ocular kinematics have been extensively studied during saccades, fixation, and visual pursuit in which torsion is governed by LL,5 13 22 26 27 and during the VOR, which violates LL.6 7 28 29 However, the transition between the VORs approximate quarter-angle strategy6 12 and saccades half-angle behavior22 27 has received little prior attention. This transition from LL to non-LL behavior is informative about the basis of LL. We know that ocular torsion is driven out of LP by the angular VOR when the axis of head rotation lies outside LP.12 If a saccade were initiated from a non-LP torsional eye position, how would saccade kinematics conform to LL? This is an unusual situation in which the velocity and position domain formulations of LL are no longer equivalent. To return the saccades position domain rotational axis to LP would require that the saccades velocity axis violate the half angle rule in the process of canceling the initial non-LP torsion. We term this behavior to be in compliance with the position domain formulation of LL. If instead the saccades velocity axis conformed to the half-angle rule, the saccade would begin and end with the non-LP torsion induced by the VOR. We term this alternative behavior to be in compliance with the velocity domain formulation of LL. In this sense, half-angle behavior is necessary but not sufficient to assure conformity to LL. To appreciate how these two formulations differ, it should be recognized that half-angle velocity domain behavior always constrains the ocular rotational axis to some plane, but that plane is identical with LP only if initial eye position is Listings primary position. It should be apparent that when a saccade is made during a VOR that evokes eye torsion, the ocular motor system can satisfy only one of the two formulations of LL and must violate the other. This dilemma permits determination of which formulation of LL is the underlying organizational principle of the ocular motor system. In other words, is the absolute position of LP of fundamental importance to the ocular motor system or is the half-angle velocity relationship the fundamental principle?
Prior experiments provide contradictory suggestions about which kinematic formulation of LL is observed when the two formulations are in conflict. Intrasaccadic torsion returning the eye to LP has been observed for both horizontal and vertical saccades after torsional optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) had driven the eye out of LP.30 This behavior supports the more fundamental nature of the position domain formulation of LL, because to return to LP, these saccades must have corrected the preexisting non-LL torsion and thus violated the half-angle velocity domain formulation. Such behavior has been presented as evidence for neural control of LL, because it seems impossible to implement with a purely mechanical system.30
Evidence favoring the more fundamental nature of the velocity domain formulation of LL comes from experiments using ocular counterrolling (OCR) to drive initial torsional eye position out of the LP defined with the head upright. Saccades and fixations during OCR have rotational axes confined to planes parallel to, but torsionally offset from, LP.10 31 32 33 34 35 Saccades during OCR obey the half-angle velocity axis formation of LL, but do not return to the LP defined with the head upright, so in this sense the saccades violate the position domain formulation of LL. This behavior has been taken as evidence of a mechanical basis of LL, since it would be explained by torsional shift of the rectus EOM pulley array during OCR.36 No data are available, however, on visually guided saccade kinematics during the angular VOR. The present study was conducted to clarify this issue.
It is also unclear whether the half-angle velocity axis dependency demanded by LL is a property of the entire ocular motor system at a given time or the behavior is axis dependent. Tilt of the ocular axis can, for example, be projected in both the torsionalhorizontal, and torsionalvertical planes. Suppose that the head were being rotated around the yaw axis and a saccade were initiated in the orthogonal (pitch) direction. If the saccade were to observe half-angle LL kinematics, would the horizontal VOR slow phase component of eye movement also observe half-angle behavior, or would quarter-angle behavior be maintained? One goal of the current investigation was to answer this question by using a transient rotational stimulus capable of evoking large, horizontal VOR slow phases uninterrupted by quick phases or horizontal saccades.
| Methods |
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Apparatus
Angular binocular eye and head positions were sampled at 1.2 kHz with dual-winding scleral magnetic search coils (Skalar Medical, Delft, The Netherlands),37 as previously used in the current laboratory.38 Reference magnetic fields were generated by three pairs of solenoid coils, each 2 m in diameter, and arranged to form the sides of a cube (C-N-C Engineering, Seattle, WA). This configuration placed the center of the cube near eye level. The two vertically oriented coil pairs were driven by 60-kHz sinusoidal currents in phase quadrature.37 The horizontally oriented coil pair was driven by a 120-kHz sinusoidal current.39 Dual-winding scleral magnetic search coil annuli were placed on both eyes of each subject under topical anesthesia with proparacaine 0.5%. Because of coil failures or other technical problems, only monocular eye movement was recorded in three subjects. The subjects in whom only the right eye was recorded were AJ and GA, whereas only the left eye was recorded in subject SY. Angular head position was measured by dual search coils mounted on a bite bar, custom molded to the upper teeth of each subject so that the teeth were rigidly coupled to skull motion. Preliminary experiments indicated that search coils affixed to a headband register head velocity with a significant delay compared with those affixed to a dental appliance, so only the latter were regarded as accurate. Search coils were connected to external detectors (C-N-C Engineering) incorporating single-pole, low-pass filters with a cutoff frequency of 167 Hz.38 Pitch-and-roll coil signals were demodulated by an amplitude-sensitive method, necessitating consideration of a sine nonlinearity. Thus, the pitch angle
in the Fick sequence (yaw, followed by pitch, followed by roll), can be calculated from the vertical search coil demodulator output (v):
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Calibration of the search coil system and experimental data acquisition at 1.2 kHz were performed as previously described in the current laboratory.38
Subjects were rotated by a 500 N-m stepper motor (Compumotor; Parker Hannifin Corp., Rohnert Park, CA) with a dedicated driver and position feedback digital controller, as previously described.38 Head position was adjusted so that the axis of rotation was located between the external auditory canals, which were approximately 7 cm posterior to the eyes. This axis was chosen to minimize the translational stimulus to the otoliths. The rotational stimulus had a peak acceleration of 2800 deg/s2 to a velocity of 190 deg/s, which rotated the head a total of 60° in 300 ms.
The visual stimulus consisted of a red laser spot back projected on a screen located 175 cm anterior to the subject. Laser spot position was precisely determined by a two-axis mirror galvanometer (General Scanning, Watertown, MA) synchronously controlled by the data-acquisition computer.
Measurement Conditions
During each trial, the subject sat with the head comfortably upright in a hardwood chair fabricated with nonmetallic fasteners, as previously described.12 38 Every rotational trial was preceded by a 2-second reference position recording in which the subject aligned the eyes toward a centered target 175 cm away.
In 90-second recordings downsampled to 120 Hz, LP was defined for each eye with the head immobile as the subject tracked the movements of the back projected laser target. The target moved in a radial pattern with a sinusoidal velocity peaking at 60 deg/s that could be tracked by visual pursuit, with only a few catch-up saccades per cycle. The velocity axis of vertical saccades was then determined with the head immobile as the subject followed a laser target that moved from center to positions ±20° vertically eccentric. The center target position was then moved horizontally to the left and right in increments of 5°, so that vertical saccades could be studied with starting positions in the horizontal range of ±20°. The velocity axis of horizontal saccades was similarly studied in an additional trial by rotating the previously described stimulus 90°. The head-fixed saccade trials provided a stimulus for 22 saccades of 20° (11 in each direction). Because experiment time was limited and the focus of the study was on saccades during the VOR, the head-fixed saccade trials were performed only once horizontally and once vertically by each subject.
Angular VOR trials consisted of 20 directionally randomized, transient yaw rotations (10 in each direction) delivered over a 50-second period. Trials were repeated for each of the three target locations and for each of the approximately five to seven chosen asynchronies between saccade target motion and rotation onset. Before each rotation, subjects were instructed in separate trials to fixate the projected laser target located at eye level, approximately 20° up or down. Onset of rotations varied randomly by
250 ms, to avoid predictive effects. Except for the laser target, the laboratory was dimly lit.
During a randomly selected third of trials for each initial target location, the target remained immobile throughout the rotation, to discourage anticipatory saccades (Fig. 1) . In the remaining two thirds of the trials, the target jumped to a new location just before or during head rotation. Target motion was randomly up or down, with equal probability. In trials in which the target was initially centered, the new location was either 20° up or down. In trials in which the target began 20° eccentric (either up or down), the target moved to the center or moved farther to 25° eccentric. Both the 20° and 5° saccades were analyzed.
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Data Analysis
Data from LP definition and VOR trials were first corrected for orientation of search coils on the eye in central gaze during the immediately preceding reference trial, as previously described.12 Fick angles were converted to rotation matrices as previously described.3 9 The orientation of LP was determined using the best fit plane to quaternion eye positions collected during the LP definition trial, using a published analytical method.4
Data were analyzed automatically on computer, with custom software written in a commercial package (LabView 7.1; National Instruments, Austin TX; Macintosh G4 and G5 computers; Apple Computer, Cupertino, CA). For each subject, rotational transients were grouped based on direction of rotation, direction of gaze, and saccade stimulus. Transient rotations in which eye position varied by more than 0.2° in the 80 ms before rotation were discarded as failures of fixation. Events were also discarded when there were saccades or blink artifacts within the 100 ms before the onset of head rotation.
Eye and head position relative to LP were determined in each trial for each eye and viewing condition. The head stimulus and ocular response during VOR initiation were converted to quaternions in Listings coordinates. This allowed the deviation from LP for the eye and head to be determined at any point in the time course of the response. Velocity vectors (
) for the eyes and head were computed from the corrected quaternion position (q) and derivative (q), as previously described3 29 40 41 :
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) was calculated from position (q) by taking the derivative of each component of the quaternion and filtering with a third-order Butterworth filter with a cutoff frequency of 50 Hz. The tilt angle of the velocity vector out of LP,
(in the sagittal plane), was determined from the horizontal (h) and torsional (t) components of velocity as previously described29 :
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) was calculated using the vertical (v) and torsional (t) components of the eye velocity vector:
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, relative to vertical ocular displacement. This value is reported as the TAR of the VOR. Linear regression was performed on sets of three similar trials when the eye was in central, up, and down gazes, as previously described.12 Regression was performed separately for each sampled time point after onset of head motion. After the initial fit, data points lying more than two standard deviations from the fit were removed. This process was then repeated once to determine the final slope and correlation coefficient (R) for the linear regression. Saccades with the head immobile were analyzed to find the dependence of eye velocity rotational axis on eye position. This value is reported as the TAR for saccades. Previously described visual stimuli were designed to elicit 20° vertical saccades over a range of horizontal starting positions or 20° horizontal saccades over a range of vertical starting positions. Velocity was determined from the quaternion position as described earlier. Saccades were automatically identified by finding the time at which eye velocity exceeded 250 deg/s for at least 25 ms. Data were then examined forward and backward from this time to identify the onset of the saccade, the duration of which was defined as the most recent time at which eye velocity was less than 50 deg/s, continuing until the next time that eye velocity decreased to less than 50 deg/s. The experimental design dictated that most saccades were 20°; however, subjects also occasionally made small corrective saccades. To exclude these small saccades from analysis, only saccades exceeding 10° amplitude were considered. Peak saccade velocity was identified, and the time of peak velocity was used to determine the velocity axis at the corresponding eye position. The slope of the linear regression of the saccade velocity axis against eye position was taken as the TAR. Linear regressions were considered in the overall analysis if R exceeded 0.85, based on a regression including at least 10 saccades.
Saccades that occurred during VOR slow phase were also analyzed. These saccades were identified by finding the time at which vertical eye velocity exceeded 150 deg/s in space-fixed coordinates for at least 25 ms. By using space-fixed coordinates to identify the saccade (but not for analysis of the saccade dynamics) the VOR contribution to eye velocity could be nearly eliminated. A slightly lower threshold was used for saccades during the VOR than for head-fixed saccades, so that smaller saccades could be included in the former analysis. Saccade onset time was defined as the time when vertical eye velocity first exceeded zero. Saccade end time was defined as the next time when the velocity returned to zero. The VOR axis in the sagittal plane was determined at saccade onset, which was considered the last possible time to observe slow-phase behavior. Saccade axis was determined in the horizontal plane at peak saccade velocity.
| Results |
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0.85 (R2
0.72) were considered, to ensure that the linear regression accurately represented the data. All subjects could make horizontal saccades meeting this criterion, but only four subjects made vertical saccades that did. The mean TAR was 0.45 ± 0.11 for vertical and 0.50 ± 0.07 for horizontal saccades. These values do not differ significantly from the 0.5 value specified by LL, nor do they differ from one another (P > 0.1). The average R2 for the trials included was 0.90 ± 0.02 for vertical saccades and 0.88 ± 0.05 (mean ± SD) for horizontal saccades. The average R2 for trials excluded was 0.4 ± 0.3.
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| Discussion |
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The present study also confirms the non-LL behavior reported somewhat more variably for the VOR. During head motion, eye position has been described to correct for head position without regard to the orientation of LP.10 12 In the more sensitive velocity domain, the ocular rotational axis reportedly deviates from the head axis by roughly one quarter the angle of eye position, both during low-frequency, sinusoidal head rotation6 29 and rotational transients.7 8 12 The present study confirms this finding, extending its temporal resolution to include the time of initiation of vertical saccade onset. Even as the saccade was about to begin, the mean TAR of the VOR slow phase was 0.29 ± 0.07, not significantly different from quarter-angle behavior.
Conformity to LL in the angular position domain implies in the velocity domain a half-angle dependence of the ocular axis on eye position.4 By visually triggering vertical saccades during large horizontal VOR slow phases, however, the current experiment demonstrates that the converse of the preceding statement is not always true. Whereas the Euler angle and velocity domain formulations of LL are theoretically identical when eye position begins in LP,4 they are no longer equivalent when eye position begins out of LP. To obey LL in the position domain in such a case, a saccade beginning from a position out of LP would have had to return to LP by correcting the preexisting torsion. That correction would require rotation about an axis not changing by half of eye orientation and so violating the half-angle rule. To conform to the velocity axis definition of LL, the preexisting non-Listing torsion cannot be canceled, requiring eye position to follow a trajectory paralleling but displaced from LP. The VOR slow phase, as observed in this study, did not conform to LL and so generated a torsional eye position displacement out of LP that was present when the visually generated saccade occurred. Despite this initial condition of non-LL torsion, the resultant visually guided saccade conformed to the velocity domain formulation of LL, because the eyes rotational velocity axis changed by half the angle of horizontal eye position. The saccade made during the VOR slow phase had a TAR of 0.45 ± 0.07 (mean ± SD), identical with the 0.45 ± 0.11 observed during vertical saccades with the head immobile and not significantly different from 0.5. Moreover, the visually guided vertical saccade exhibited this half-angle behavior in the velocity domain despite progressively increasing non-LL torsion due to the ongoing VOR slow phase. Rather than returning the eye to LP, the vertical saccade during the horizontal VOR continued to depart LP in about the same way as for the VOR alone. While failing to observe the position domain formulation of LL, the vertical saccades observed the velocity domain formulation of LL.
The kinematic result just described is seemingly at odds with the study of Lee et al.,30 who examined saccade kinematics from non-LL starting torsion induced by torsional OKN. The optokinetic system accesses vestibular velocity storage and can also produce ocular torsion out of LP. They found that saccades during torsional OKN returned eye position to LP.30 Although the velocity domain formulation of LL was not explicitly examined by Lee et al., such a saccade would necessarily violate LL in the velocity domain, since the torsional component of eye velocity must correct the initial non-LL torsion induced by the OKN stimulus. However, during normal torsional OKN, a slow-phase component brings the eye out of LP and is followed by a torsional quick phase that returns the eye back to LP.30 Given the similarities between the VOR and OKN, one might have incorrectly expected the saccade in the current experiment to have returned eye position to LP. The difference in outcomes may be related to the reflexive coupling between the slow and quick phases of nystagmus. During OKN, quick phases reflexively return eye position to LP, even in the absence of any voluntary saccade. It has been reported that during vestibular nystagmus, quick phases even drive the eye out of LP, allowing slow phases to return the eye to LP.10 One must presume that the neural commands for slow and quick phases of nystagmus are not independent45 46 and that saccades may trigger quick phases. Vestibular nystagmus, with its repetitive alternation of slow and quick phases, has an element of predictability that may confound the study of VOR kinematics. It is possible that in the experiments of Lee et al.,30 the experimentally imposed saccade entrained an OKN quick phase that was responsible for bringing eye position back into LP. The current experiment altogether avoided predictability and quick phases and indeed any saccades besides the desired vertical one. Unlike the experiment of Lee et al., in the present study, vertical saccades during the angular VOR never returned the eye to LP.
The transition in kinematics between the quarter angle of the VOR and the half angle of saccades occurred in the current study without measurable delay. It has been demonstrated that the TAR for the VOR is near 0.25 as early as 20 ms after head rotation onset.12 Because computation of the TAR requires sufficiently high eye velocity to compute the rotational axis in the presence of baseline noise, 20 ms is as early as any VOR axis can be determined at all and is very close to human angular VOR latency, as measured under these conditions.38 This suggests that quarter-angle kinematics are an intrinsic property of disynaptic VOR. The current results indicate that the TAR remained near quarter angle up to saccade onset and thus was not modified in anticipation of the saccade. By the time peak velocity was reached only 35 ms later, the TAR for the saccade was 0.5, as required by the velocity domain formulation of LL. Thus, the velocity domain formulation of LL seems to be an inherent property of the visually guided saccade, irrespective of head motion. We would therefore propose that the underlying rationale for LL originates in the velocity rather than in the position domain.
The purpose and underlying basis of LL in the oculomotor system remain controversial. Some favor a neuronal implementation of LL in the premotor neural circuits,15 30 47 48 whereas others have suggested that the origin of LL lies in the mechanical action of rectus EOM pulleys.20 36 49 The finding of Lee et al.30 that saccades beginning out of LP return the eye to LP has been taken as support for a neural origin of LL, but that finding is contradicted by the current results for the VOR. If a saccade always ended in LP, it would imply that the saccade was programmed to do so based on knowledge of starting eye position relative to LP. If such behavior had been observed, it would have been difficult to explain on the basis of mechanical factors. The current findings support a mechanical basis for LL. These results indicate that if the VOR has moved the eye out of LP at the beginning of a visually guided saccade, the eye remains out of LP at the end of the saccade. Thus, in the current paradigm, the absolute location of the eye relative to LP does not seem crucial to the oculomotor system. It is rather the half-angle velocity domain relationship that apparently provides the more general basis for LL.
Most of the vertical saccades studied were in response to target motion that occurred 40 to 120 ms before head rotation began. Saccade planning began, but may have been incomplete, when head rotation started. It should be noted that this is a major difference between the present study and the study of Lee et al.30 in which saccades were initiated during OKN. In that study, saccade programming began while relatively low velocity torsional OKN slow phases out of LP were already under way. For most saccades studied in the current experiment, the eye was still quietly in LP when saccade planning began. Thus, it is possible that in the saccades studied by Lee et al. during steady state OKN, neural programming could compensate for predictable and slowly accumulating ocular torsion, while neural programming could not anticipate the torsion later to develop due to the current unpredictable, high-acceleration VOR.
Perhaps in the current experiment saccade innervation was adjusted during saccade planning, or intrasaccadically, to fit the velocity domain definition of LL, and this computation was updated by ongoing vestibular input. Such a dynamic 3-D neural computation would be complex and serve no obvious purpose. A sensory purpose of LL is not evident, despite the suggestion that LL simplifies perception of orientation for eccentric gaze locations.50 Perception is not a factor during the flight of a saccade,51 although visual perception is vital during postsaccadic fixation.49 Perception does not explain why the saccade follows the velocity domain definition of LL despite initial torsion out of LP. The currently observed saccade behavior seems aimed to preserve the non-Listings torsion driven by the VOR slow phase. The torsional VOR slow phase itself is perceptually valuable to compensate for head rotation, since the VOR stabilizes images of the world on the retina to enable clear vision. Another possible rationale for neural implementation of LL is decreased energy expenditure,6 but the negligible energy expenditure associated with rotating the eye a few degrees in torsion hardly seems a rationale for such complex neural processing.
The current observations appear consistent with peripheral mechanical constraints on ocular rotation. The model of Quaia and Optican49 demonstrates that if the half-angle eye velocity dependence on eye position corresponding to LL is implemented in orbital mechanics, the oculomotor plant appears commutative to the brain and can be commanded by signals corresponding to time derivatives of eye position without measurable errors in velocityposition matching.20 This facilitates the matching of the saccadic pulse and step commands, so that perceptually important postsaccadic drift is avoided. Strong functional anatomic evidence from orbital magnetic resonance imaging indicates that the rectus EOMs change their pulling directions by half the change in eye orientation across a broad range of secondary and tertiary gaze positions.52 53 This mechanical behavior intrinsically implements half-angle behavior, corresponding to the velocity domain formulation of LL. The active-pulley hypothesis proposes that the half-angle kinematics of the rectus and inferior oblique EOMs is due to their path constraint by connective tissue rings comprising pulleys. These pulleys receive insertions from the orbital layers of their respective EOMs, permitting (for all pulleys except the trochlea of the superior oblique) active control of pulley position and hence EOM pulling direction.52 53 54 Thus, it appears that the velocity domain formulation of LL is an emergent property of the orbital mechanics and is a sort of default mode for the ocular motor apparatus. With such plant mechanics, visual fixation and pursuit can be commanded by 2-D retinal error signals without central neural representation of 3-D eye position19 ; and, although a 3-D representation of eye position is necessary at a higher level for the sensorimotor transformation that allows accurate target localization in space,55 peripheral orbital mechanics constrain the torsional DF.
The observation that the quarter-angle VOR behavior of the VOR and half-angle behavior of saccades can occur within a few milliseconds of each other provides some clues to the underlying basis of how the oculomotor system changes between these behaviors. It has been suggested that the quarter-angle behavior of the VOR could be caused by anteroposterior displacement of the pulleys.19 56 However, no such movement of the pulleys has been observed, and quarter-angle VOR kinematics may be more simply explained by weak torsional VOR gain.15 The current findings provide further evidence that the pulleys do not shift anteroposteriorly during the VOR, since the transition between quarter- and half-angle kinematics observed in our study would require such a hypothetical shift to occur in the unrealistically short time frame of 20 ms or less. Neural control of the VOR axis has been offered as a plausible alternative.15 If quarter-angle VOR kinematics is a neural strategy, it implies an underlying purpose. Quarter-angle VOR behavior has been suggested as a strategy for maintaining eye position within the oculomotor range and as a compromise between limiting optic flow at the fovea and the periphery.15 However, the current results indicate that a vertical saccade superimposed on the horizontal VOR does not bring eye position closer to LP, and so it does not confine the limit of eye position.
This evidence argues for reconsideration of mechanical factors in ocular kinematics, because rectus EOM paths are the determinants of the velocity axes the EOMs impose on the eye. The current experiment demonstrated that the quarter-angle VOR kinematics and half-angle kinematics of saccades could follow within a few milliseconds of each other. Quarter-angle VOR behavior that violates LL may be explained by oblique EOM action on rectus EOM pulling directions. The orbital layers of the inferior57 and superior oblique EOMs insert directly and indirectly on the rectus pulleys, so that oblique EOM activity can alter the torsional orientation of the rectus pulley array during the VOR.23 36 This imposes a torsional offset in the mechanically implemented LP, as is observed during static head tilts.33 58 Consistent with the noncommutative demands of the VOR,59 torsional repositioning of the rectus pulley array influences the directional response of the rectus EOMs to subsequent activation by other inputs, including saccadic target programming. It appears likely that vestibular inputs drive the instantaneous torsional position of the rectus pulley array. This torsion is mechanically superimposed on the mechanical configuration of the rectus EOM pulleys necessary to implement the half-angle dependency of ocular rotational axis on eye position required by LL. This would explain the current finding that vertical saccades during the horizontal VOR slow phase not only maintain the non-LL starting torsion imposed by the VOR, but also the current finding that this torsion increases intrasaccadically as the VOR continues. This arrangement also explains the absence of observable delay in shift between quarter-angle VOR kinematics and the half-angle kinematics of the saccade. The current findings correspond to those predicted by the "displacement-feedback" model of Crawford and Guitton, in which visual retinal error can be mapped only onto corresponding zero-torsion motor error commands within LP.60 The displacement-feedback model, with either a mechanical or neural basis for half-angle behavior, can simulate the visuo-motor transformations necessary for accurate and kinematically correct saccades within a reasonable oculomotor range, but was rejected by Crawford and Guitton on the basis of their supposition of empirical findings contrary to those of the current experiment.60 The current findings suggest that the "displacement-feedback" model, lacking in a neural representation of LL, is plausible for control of saccades to visual targets, and that in context of realistic mechanical properties of EOM pulleys,53 control of visual saccades does not require explicit neural computation of ocular torsion. The quarter-angle dependence of the VOR axis on eye orientation, however, is a complex behavior that may result from both mechanical and central neural causes yet to be clarified.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Submitted for publication February 3, 2005; revised April 10, 2005; accepted April 26, 2005.
Disclosure: B.T. Crane, None; J. Tian, None; J.L. Demer, None
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Joseph L. Demer, Jules Stein Eye Institute, 100 Stein Plaza, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095-7002; jld{at}ucla.edu.
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