1999
DOI: 10.1016/s0306-4522(99)00275-4
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Neck input modifies the reference frame for coding labyrinthine signals in the cerebellar vermis: a cellular analysis

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Cited by 47 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Once in the fastigial nucleus, however, two distinct populations of vestibular-related neurons have been described: one group that responds to low-frequency (Ͻ1 Hz) sinusoidal vestibular stimulation and another group that is tuned toward frequencies Յ10 Hz (Schlosser et al 2001). The fastigial nucleus contains vestibular-related neurons that respond to vestibular signals with the appropriate coordinate transformation necessary to elaborate motor commands appropriate for whole-body responses (Brooks and Cullen 2009;Kleine et al 2004;Manzoni et al 1999). These behaviors are similar to the vestibularevoked muscle and sway responses that show well-defined spatial transformations related to the position of the head relative to the feet (Britton et al 1993;Fitzpatrick et al 1994;Lund et al 1983;Mian and Day 2009) and distinct low-and higher-frequency response characteristics to vestibular stimuli (as described here).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Once in the fastigial nucleus, however, two distinct populations of vestibular-related neurons have been described: one group that responds to low-frequency (Ͻ1 Hz) sinusoidal vestibular stimulation and another group that is tuned toward frequencies Յ10 Hz (Schlosser et al 2001). The fastigial nucleus contains vestibular-related neurons that respond to vestibular signals with the appropriate coordinate transformation necessary to elaborate motor commands appropriate for whole-body responses (Brooks and Cullen 2009;Kleine et al 2004;Manzoni et al 1999). These behaviors are similar to the vestibularevoked muscle and sway responses that show well-defined spatial transformations related to the position of the head relative to the feet (Britton et al 1993;Fitzpatrick et al 1994;Lund et al 1983;Mian and Day 2009) and distinct low-and higher-frequency response characteristics to vestibular stimuli (as described here).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The rostral fastigial nucleus represents the main output of the medial zone of the anterior vermis (Voogd, 1989), the role of which in vestibular-somatosensory interactions has received strong experimental support (Manzoni et al, 1998(Manzoni et al, , 1999. In fact, Manzoni et al (1999) have previously reported that static neck input modulates the responses of anterior vermis Purkinje cells during complex vestibular stimulation in decerebrate cats. The present results show that these vestibular-somatosensory interactions implement a coordinate transformation to estimate motion of the body through space.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Extensive convergence of vestibular and somatosensory signals has been reported in motion-sensitive areas of the brainstem vestibular nuclei (VN), cerebellar cortex (e.g., anterior and posterior cerebellar vermis), and deep cerebellar nuclei (Boyle and Pompeiano, 1981;Anastasopoulos and Mergner, 1982;Wilson et al, 1990;Manzoni et al, 1998Manzoni et al, , 1999McCrea, 1999, 2000;McCrea et al, 1999). At present, it is not known whether this convergence reflects an underlying reference frame transformation to compute body motion in space.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent studies suggest that Purkinje cells in the posterior cerebellar vermis (nodulus and ventral uvula) encode such spatially transformed canal signals (Angelaki et al 2010;Yakusheva et al 2007). Other studies have provided evidence that deep cerebellar neurons in the rostral fastigial nucleus and Purkinje cells in the anterior vermis carry vestibular signals that have been at least partially transformed into a body-centered reference frame (Kleine et al 2004;Manzoni et al 1999;Shaikh et al 2004). Furthermore, a recent study has explicitly shown that, for movements in the horizontal plane, many neurons in the rostral fastigial nuclei combine vestibular and neck proprioceptive signals precisely as required to compute body motion (Brooks and Cullen 2009).…”
Section: Reference Frame Transformation Of Vestibular Signals For Reamentioning
confidence: 99%