Title
Expectation and the vestibular control of balance.
Abstract
Recent experiments have shown that the visual channel of balance control is susceptible to cognitive influence. When a subject is aware that an upcoming visual disturbance is likely to arise from an external agent, that is, movement of the visual environment, rather than from self-motion, the whole-body response is suppressed. Here we ask whether this is a principle that generalizes to the vestibular channel of balance control. We studied the whole-body response to a pure vestibular perturbation produced by galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS; 0.5 mA for 3 sec). In the first experiment, subjects stood with vision occluded while stimuli were delivered either by the subject himself (self-triggered) or by the experimenter. For the latter, the stimulus was delivered either without warning (unpredictable) or at a fixed interval following an auditory cue (predictable). Results showed that GVS evoked a whole-body response that was not affected by whether the stimulus was self-triggered, predictable, or unpredictable. The same results were obtained in a second experiment in which subjects had access to visual information during vestibular stimulation. We conclude that the vestibular-evoked balance response is automatic and immune to knowledge of the source of the perturbation and its timing. We suggest the reason for this difference between visual and vestibular channels stems from a difference in their natural abilities to signal self-motion. The vestibular system responds to acceleration of the head in space and therefore always signals self-motion. Visual f low, on the other hand, is ambiguous in that it signals object motion and eye motion, as well as self-motion.
Year
DOI
Venue
2005
10.1162/0898929053279540
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Keywords
DocType
Volume
visual environment,vestibular stimulation,vestibular control,whole-body response,visual channel,galvanic vestibular stimulation,vestibular system,vestibular channel,pure vestibular perturbation,balance control,upcoming visual disturbance
Journal
17
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
3
0898-929X
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
0
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Michel Guerraz100.34
Brian L Day210.69