Mechanisms controlling Human Head Stabilization: I. head-neck dynamics
during Random Rotations in the horizontal plane.
Keshner, E.A., and B. W. Peterson.
Sensory Motor Performance Program, Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago,
Chicago, IL 60611, Department of Physiology, Northwestern University Medical
School, Chicago, IL 60611.
APStracts 2:0026N, 1995.
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
1. Potential mechanisms for controlling stabilization of the head and neck
include voluntary movements, vestibular (VCR) and proprioceptive (CCR) neck
reflexes, and system mechanics. In this study we have tested the hypothesis
that the relative importance of those mechanisms in producing compensatory
actions of the head-neck motor system depends upon the frequency of an
externally applied perturbation. Angular velocity of the head with respect to
the trunk (neck) and myoelectric activity of three neck muscles were recorded
in seven seated subjects during pseudorandom rotations of the trunk in the
horizontal plane. Subjects were externally perturbed with a random sum-of-
sines stimulus at frequencies ranging from 0.185 Hz to 4.11 Hz. Four
instructional sets were presented. Voluntary mechanisms were examined by
having the subjects actively stabilize the head in the presence of visual
feedback as the body was rotated (VS). Visual feedback was then removed and
the subjects attempted to stabilize the head in the dark as the body was
rotated (NV). Reflex mechanisms were examined when subjects performed a mental
arithmetic task during body rotations in the dark (MA). Finally, subjects
performed a voluntary head tracking task while the body was kept stationary
(VT). 2. Gains and phases of head velocity indicated good compensation to the
stimulus in VS and NV at frequencies below 1 Hz. Gains dropped and phases
advanced between 1-2 Hz, suggesting interference between neural and mechanical
components. Above 3 Hz, the gains of head velocity increased steeply and
exceeded unity, suggesting the emergence of mechanical resonance. 3. At low
frequencies (below 1 Hz) during MA, gains were very low and phases indicated
that the head was moving with the trunk. A steady rise in gains and shift in
phases toward a compensatory response were observed as frequency increased.
Between 1-2 Hz, the response of the neck moved toward compensation as gains
observed during voluntary stabilization decreased, suggesting that reflex
mechanisms were becoming the predominant controller of compensatory processes
at this frequency range. Around 3 Hz, mechanical resonance was observed. 4. In
VS, NV, and MA, EMG activity steadily decreased in gain up to 1 Hz, then
continuously increased at frequencies above 1 Hz. This implied sustained
participation of neural mechanisms in the higher frequency range. Depending on
the relative motion of the head with respect to space and to the trunk, either
the vestibulocollic or cervicocollic (proprioceptive) reflex were assumed to
be present in the EMG output. 5. The patterns observed in the neck responses
secondary to trunk perturbations were not apparent in the response dynamics of
voluntary head tracking. In VT, the most compensatory gains and phases of both
head velocity and muscle EMG responses appeared at the lowest frequencies of
head movement. Gains steadily declined and phase lags increased as frequency
increased. 6. We acknowledge that the contributions of the three mechanisms
examined here cannot be completely separated by the paradigms used, but the
data suggest that reflexes do participate in the stabilization process.
Comparisons of the frequency responses of the cat and human showed that a
model based on the passive mechanics of the cat's neck is applicable to these
data even though experimental conditions were different. Evidence of a similar
pattern of gains and phases in our data to that of the animal model allow us
to conclude that the observed activity of the head with respect to the trunk
in this series of experiments is indicative of a process of compensatory head
stabilization as a consequence of trunk movements caused by external forces.
Received 26 October 1994; accepted in final form 1 February 1995.
APS Manuscript Number J530-2.
Article publication pending J. Neurophysiol.
ISSN 1080-4757 Copyright 1995 The American Physiological Society.
Published in APStracts on 3 April 1995.