Dual adaptation and adaptive generalization of the human vestibulo-ocular reflex |
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Authors: | Robert B. Welch Bruce Bridgeman Jason A. Williams Regina Semmler |
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Affiliation: | 1. NASA Ames Research Center, Mail Stop 239-11, 94035, Moffett Field, CA 2. University of California, Santa Cruz, California 3. University of Clausthal, Clausthal, Germany
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Abstract: | In two experiments, we examined the possibility that the human vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) is subject todual adaptation (the ability to adapt to a sensory rearrangement more rapidly and/or more completely after repeated experience with it) andadaptive generalization (the ability to adapt more readily to a novel sensory rearrangement as a result of prior dual adaptation training). In Experiment 1, the subjects actively turned the head during alternating exposure to a visual-vestibular rearrangement (target/head gain=0.5) and the normal situation (target/head gain=0.0). These conditions produced both adaptation and dual adaptation of the VOR but no evidence of adaptive generalization when tested with a target/head gain of 1.0. Experiment 2, in which exposure to the 0.5 gain entailed externally controlled (i.e., passive) whole body rotation, resulted in VOR adaptation but no dual adaptation. As in Experiment 1, no evidence of adaptive generalization was found. |
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