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. 1999 May 28:871:81-93.
doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1999.tb09177.x.

Otolith processing in the deep cerebellar nuclei

Affiliations

Otolith processing in the deep cerebellar nuclei

U Büttner et al. Ann N Y Acad Sci. .

Abstract

To investigate the otolith contribution to the responses of "vestibular only" neurons in the rostral fastigial nucleus (FN), single-unit activity was recorded in the alert monkey with the head fixed during static and dynamic stimulation (+/- 15 deg, 0.06-1.4 Hz) around an earth-fixed horizontal axis. Head orientation could be altered allowing for roll, pitch, and intermediate planes of orientation. For the vast majority of neurons a response vector orientation (RVO) with an optimal response and a null-response at a head orientation 90 deg apart could be determined. Presumably more than 30% of the vestibular only neurons had an otolith input, as indicated by responses to static tilt, head-position-related activity, large phase changes (> 100 deg) of neuronal activity between 0.06 and 1.4 Hz, changes of the RVO at different frequencies and complex responses (spatio-temporal convergence). Thus, neurons in FN reflecting an otolith or a combined canal-otolith input are much more common than up to now thought. Vestibular-only neurons are most likely involved in vestibulospinal mechanisms. Their precise functional role has yet to be determined.

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