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Global VOR gain adaptation during near fixation to foveal targets
Authors:Williams Jason A  Bridgeman Bruce  Woods Tadg  Welch Robert
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, Gonzaga University, 501 E Boone Ave, AD54, Spokane, WA, USA. williamsj@gonzaga.edu
Abstract:Long-term rotational vestibulo-ocular (VOR) adaptation occurs during systematic dysmetria between visual and vestibular afferents, adjusting eye-rotation angular velocity to re-establish retinal stability of the visual field. Due to translational motion of the eyes during head rotation, VOR gain is higher when fixating near objects. The current study measures VOR in humans before and after 6 min of exposure to a foveal near-target during sinusoidal whole-body rotation at 0.45 Hz. All of six participants showed post-exposure increases in open-loop VOR gain after fixating near targets, demonstrating a mean modulation increase of open-loop VOR gain from 0.86 before adaptation to 1.2 after adaptation. We discuss a number of theoretical and applied implications.
Keywords:Vestibulo-ocular reflex   Adaptive plasticity   Vergence   Adaptation   Motor processes
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