Vestibular mapping of the naturalistic head-centered motion spectrum

BACKGROUND: Naturalistic head accelerations can be used to elicit vestibular evoked potentials (VestEPs). These potentials allow for analysis of cortical vestibular processing and its multi-sensory integration with a high temporal resolution. METHODS: We report the results of two experiments in whic...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of vestibular research Vol. 33; no. 5; pp. 299 - 312
Main Authors Ertl, Matthias, zu Eulenburg, Peter, Woller, Marie, Mayadali, Ümit, Boegle, Rainer, Dieterich, Marianne
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London, England SAGE Publications 03.10.2023
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Summary:BACKGROUND: Naturalistic head accelerations can be used to elicit vestibular evoked potentials (VestEPs). These potentials allow for analysis of cortical vestibular processing and its multi-sensory integration with a high temporal resolution. METHODS: We report the results of two experiments in which we compared the differential VestEPs elicited by randomized translations, rotations, and tilts in healthy subjects on a motion platform. RESULTS: An event-related potential (ERP) analysis revealed that established VestEPs were verifiable in all three acceleration domains (translations, rotations, tilts). A further analysis of the VestEPs showed a significant correlation between rotation axes (yaw, pitch, roll) and the amplitude of the evoked potentials. We found increased amplitudes for rotations in the roll compared to the pitch and yaw plane. A distributed source localization analysis showed that the activity in the cingulate sulcus visual (CSv) area best explained direction-dependent amplitude modulations of the VestEPs, but that the same cortical network (posterior insular cortex, CSv) is involved in processing vestibular information, regardless of the motion direction. CONCLUSION: The results provide evidence for an anisotropic, direction-dependent processing of vestibular input by cortical structures. The data also suggest that area CSv plays an integral role in ego-motion perception and interpretation of spatial features such as acceleration direction and intensity.
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ISSN:0957-4271
1878-6464
1878-6464
DOI:10.3233/VES-210121