Properties of cerebellar fastigial neurons during translation, rotation, and eye movements.
نویسندگان
چکیده
The most medial of the deep cerebellar nuclei, the fastigial nucleus (FN), receives sensory vestibular information and direct inhibition from the cerebellar vermis. We investigated the signal processing in the primate FN by recording single-unit activities during translational motion, rotational motion, and eye movements. Firing rate modulation during horizontal plane translation in the absence of eye movements was observed in all non-eye-movement-sensitive cells and 26% of the pursuit eye-movement-sensitive neurons in the caudal FN. Many non-eye-movement-sensitive cells recorded in the rostral FN of three fascicularis monkeys exhibited convergence of signals from both the otolith organs and the semicircular canals. At low frequencies of translation, the majority of these rostral FN cells changed their firing rates in phase with head velocity rather than linear acceleration. As frequency increased, FN vestibular neurons exhibited a wide range of response dynamics with most cells being characterized by increasing phase leads as a function of frequency. Unlike cells in the vestibular nuclei, none of the rostral FN cells responded to rotational motion alone, without simultaneously exhibiting sensitivity to translational motion. Modulation during earth-horizontal axis rotation was observed in more than half (77%) of the neurons, although with smaller gains than during translation. In contrast, only 47% of the cells changed their firing rates during earth-vertical axis rotations in the absence of a dynamic linear acceleration stimulus. These response properties suggest that the rostral FN represents a main processing center of otolith-driven information for inertial motion detection and spatial orientation.
منابع مشابه
Optokinetic and vestibular responsiveness in the macaque rostral vestibular and fastigial nuclei.
We recorded from rostral vestibular (VN) and rostral fastigial nuclei (FN) neurons that did not respond to eye movements during three-dimensional (3D) vestibular and optokinetic stimulation (OKS). The majority of neurons in both areas (76 and 69% in VN and FN, respectively) responded during both rotational and translational motion. Preferred directions scattered throughout 3D space for translat...
متن کاملParticipation of caudal fastigial nucleus in smooth pursuit eye movements. II. Effects of muscimol inactivation.
We studied the effect of temporarily inactivating the caudal fastigial nucleus (CFN) in three rhesus macaques trained to make smooth pursuit eye movements. We injected the gamma-aminobutyric acid A agonist muscimol into one or both CFNs where we had recorded pursuit-related neurons a few minutes earlier. Inactivating the CFN on one side impaired pursuit in one monkey so severely that it could n...
متن کاملCerebellar fastigial nucleus influence on ipsilateral abducens activity during saccades.
To characterize the cerebellar influence on neurons in the abducens (ABD) nucleus, we recorded ABD neurons before and after we inactivated the caudal part of the ipsilateral cerebellar fastigial nucleus (cFN) with muscimol injection. cFN activity influences the horizontal component of saccades. cFN inactivation increased the activity of most ipsilateral ABD neurons (19/22 in 2 monkeys) during i...
متن کاملThe role of the cerebellum in voluntary eye movements.
In general the cerebellum is crucial for the control but not the initiation of movement. Voluntary eye movements are particularly useful for investigating the specific mechanisms underlying cerebellar control because they are precise and their brain-stem circuitry is already well understood. Here we describe single-unit and inactivation data showing that the posterior vermis and the caudal fast...
متن کاملMotor Control and the Cerebellum: Adaptive Changes in Fastigial Neurons to Surgically Induced Eye Movement Dysmetria
INTRODUCTION: How does the nervous system modify itself to support motor learning and control? Few answers to this question have been found, partly because the basic circuit underlying a particular behavior must be understood before it is possible to identify the changes in the circuit accompanying learning. Lesions of the cerebellum produce muscular uncoordination by creating timing and force ...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Journal of neurophysiology
دوره 93 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2005