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Effects of prolonged roll-tilt on the subjective visual and haptic vertical in healthy human subjects

Wedtgrube, Andrea; Bockisch, C J; Tarnutzer, A A (2020). Effects of prolonged roll-tilt on the subjective visual and haptic vertical in healthy human subjects. Journal of Vestibular Research, 30(1):1-16.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

While verticality perception is normally accurate when upright, a systematic bias ("post-tilt bias") is seen after prolonged roll-tilt. The source of the bias could either be central (shifting "null" position) or related to changes in torsional eye-position.

OBJECTIVE

To study the mechanisms of the post-tilt bias in vision-dependent and vision-independent paradigms and to characterize the impact of optokinetic stimulation.

METHODS

The subjective visual-vertical (SVV) and subjective haptic-vertical (SHV) were measured after static roll-tilt (±90deg ear-down ("adaptation") position; duration = 5 min; n = 9 subjects). To assess the effect of visual stimuli, a control condition (darkness) was compared with an optokinetic stimulus (clockwise/counter-clockwise rotation, 60deg/sec) during adaptation.

RESULTS

A significant post-tilt bias was more frequent for the SVV than the SHV (72% vs. 54%, p = 0.007) with shifts pointing towards or away from the adaptation position with similar frequency. Exponential-decay time-constants were comparable for both paradigms and directions of shifts. The optokinetic stimulus had no effect on the bias for either paradigm.

CONCLUSIONS

Emerging in both vision-dependent and vision-independent paradigms, the results support the hypothesis that the post-tilt bias results from a shift in the internal estimate of direction of gravity, while optokinetic nystagmus seems not to be a major contributor.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Ophthalmology Clinic
04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Clinic for Neurology
04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Clinic for Otorhinolaryngology
Dewey Decimal Classification:610 Medicine & health
Scopus Subject Areas:Life Sciences > General Neuroscience
Health Sciences > Otorhinolaryngology
Life Sciences > Sensory Systems
Health Sciences > Neurology (clinical)
Language:English
Date:2020
Deposited On:23 Dec 2020 15:32
Last Modified:23 Mar 2025 02:41
Publisher:I O S Press
ISSN:0957-4271
OA Status:Closed
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.3233/VES-200690
PubMed ID:32065807

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