The effects of support-proprioceptive deprivation on visual-manual tracking and vestibular function
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2013-09-01
scimago Q4
SJR: 0.168
CiteScore: 0.8
Impact factor: —
ISSN: 03621197, 16083164
Physiology
Physiology (medical)
Abstract
In order to determine the effects of support and proprioceptive afferentation on the characteristics of visual-manual tracking (VMT), we used a model of weightlessness—horizontal dry immersion. Altogether 30 subjects who stayed in the immersion bath from 5 to 7 days were examined to evaluate the accuracy of the VMT in tasks to pursue the jerky (saccadically) and smooth (linear, pendular and circular) movement of a point visual stimulus. Examinations were performed before, during and after immersion using electrooculography (to record eye movements) and a joystick (to record hand movements) with a biological visual feedback—one of the two visible stimuli on the screen matched the current angle of the joystick handle. Computerized visual stimulation programs were presented to subjects using virtual-reality glasses. We analyzed the time, amplitude and velocity characteristics of the visual and manual tracking (VT and MT respectively), including the efficiency ratio (eVT and eMT) and the gain (gVT and gMT) as the respective ratios of the amplitudes and velocities of the eyes/hand movements to the stimulus movement. eVT was significantly reduced in comparison to the baseline all the time, while the subject lay in the immersion bath and until R+4 day after immersion. eMT decreased significantly only on I-1 and I-3 days of immersion. gVT significantly differed from the baseline only on I-3 and I-6 days of immersion and R+1 day after immersion. We found no significant changes in gMT. Evaluations of the vestibular function (VF) were performed before and after immersion using videooculography. We analyzed the static torsional otolith-cervical-ocular reflex (OCOR), the dynamical vestibular-cervical-ocular reactions (VCOR), spontaneous eye movements (SpEM), and the accuracy of the perception of the subjective visual vertical (SVV). After immersion, 47% of all subjects had a significant reduction of OCOR with a simultaneous significant increase of VCOR on 37% of subjects, as well as significant changes in the accuracy of the perception of the SVV, which correlated with changes in OCOR. We found a correlation between characteristics of the VT and MT and between the characteristics of the VF and VT, but we found no correlation between VF and MT. We discovered that removal of the support and minimization of the proprioceptive afferentation has a greater impact upon the accuracy of the VT than the accuracy of the MT.
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Kornilova L. et al. The effects of support-proprioceptive deprivation on visual-manual tracking and vestibular function // Human Physiology. 2013. Vol. 39. No. 5. pp. 462-471.
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Kornilova L., NAUMOV I., Glukhikh D. O., Habarova E. V., Kozlovskaya I. The effects of support-proprioceptive deprivation on visual-manual tracking and vestibular function // Human Physiology. 2013. Vol. 39. No. 5. pp. 462-471.
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RIS
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1134/S0362119713050071
UR - https://doi.org/10.1134/S0362119713050071
TI - The effects of support-proprioceptive deprivation on visual-manual tracking and vestibular function
T2 - Human Physiology
AU - Kornilova, L.N.
AU - NAUMOV, I.A.
AU - Glukhikh, D O
AU - Habarova, E V
AU - Kozlovskaya, I.B.
PY - 2013
DA - 2013/09/01
PB - Pleiades Publishing
SP - 462-471
IS - 5
VL - 39
SN - 0362-1197
SN - 1608-3164
ER -
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BibTex (up to 50 authors)
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@article{2013_Kornilova,
author = {L.N. Kornilova and I.A. NAUMOV and D O Glukhikh and E V Habarova and I.B. Kozlovskaya},
title = {The effects of support-proprioceptive deprivation on visual-manual tracking and vestibular function},
journal = {Human Physiology},
year = {2013},
volume = {39},
publisher = {Pleiades Publishing},
month = {sep},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1134/S0362119713050071},
number = {5},
pages = {462--471},
doi = {10.1134/S0362119713050071}
}
Cite this
MLA
Copy
Kornilova, L.N., et al. “The effects of support-proprioceptive deprivation on visual-manual tracking and vestibular function.” Human Physiology, vol. 39, no. 5, Sep. 2013, pp. 462-471. https://doi.org/10.1134/S0362119713050071.
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