Inputs from the ipsilateral and contralateral vestibular apparatus to behaviorally characterized abducens neurons in rhesus monkeys
D. M. Broussard, R. C. DeCharms and S. G. Lisberger Department of Physiology, W. M. Keck Foundation Center for Integrative Neuroscience, University of California, San Francisco 94143, USA. 1. We made extracellular recordings from neurons in the abducens nuclei of alert rhesus monkeys during electric...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1995-12, Vol.74 (6), p.2445-2459 |
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Zusammenfassung: | D. M. Broussard, R. C. DeCharms and S. G. Lisberger
Department of Physiology, W. M. Keck Foundation Center for Integrative Neuroscience, University of California, San Francisco 94143, USA.
1. We made extracellular recordings from neurons in the abducens nuclei of
alert rhesus monkeys during electrical stimulation of the vestibular
labyrinths with brief current pulses and during smooth pursuit, steady
fixation, and the vestibuloocular reflex (VOR) evoked by passive head
turns. The responses to electrical stimuli were compared with quantitative
measures of the sensitivity of each neuron to eye position and eye
velocity. We also compared the strengths of the vestibular inputs from the
labyrinths ipsilateral and contralateral to the side of recording. 2.
Abducens neurons showed transient excitation after a current pulse was
applied to the contralateral labyrinth and transient inhibition after
stimulation of the ipsilateral labyrinth. The latency of excitation had a
mean value of 1.7 ms and a median value of 1.5 ms. Latency was unimodally
distributed with little variation among neurons. Neurons with large
responses showed a second phase of excitation that started 2.5 ms after the
stimulus. 3. In two of three monkeys, the excitatory responses of abducens
neurons to electrical stimulation of the contralateral labyrinth were
approximately 3 times as large as their inhibitory responses to stimulation
of the ipsilateral labyrinth. The difference in response size was not
observed in the third monkey. The asymmetry in the size of the electrically
evoked inputs from the two labyrinths was associated with a smaller
asymmetry in responses of abducens neurons during the VOR evoked by passive
head turns. The increase in firing rate during head rotation away from the
side of the recording was almost always larger than the decrease in firing
rate during head rotation toward the side of the recording. 4. The size of
the neuronal response to electrical stimulation was correlated with the
magnitude of the change in discharge rate during eye movements. Single or
multiple regression of measures of response amplitude against eye position
threshold, sensitivity to eye position, sensitivity to eye velocity, and
baseline discharge rate yielded correlation coefficients that ranged from
0.26 to 0.92 in different monkeys. The existence of positive correlations
is consistent with a role of the intrinsic properties of abducens neurons
in determining recruitment order. However, the existen |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1995.74.6.2445 |