Mechanisms controlling Human Head Stabilization: II. head-neck
characteristics during random rotations in the vertical plane.
Keshner, E.A., R. L. Cromwell, 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 2:0027N, 1995.
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
1. In this study we have tested the hypothesis that the mechanisms controlling
stabilization of the head-neck motor system can vary with both the frequency
and spatial orientation of an externally applied perturbation. Angular
velocity of the head with respect to the trunk (neck) and myoelectric activity
of two neck muscles (semispinalis capitis and sternocleidomastoid) were
recorded in eight seated subjects during pseudorandom rotations of the trunk
in the vertical (pitch) plane. Subjects were externally perturbed with a
random sum-of-sines stimulus at frequencies ranging from 0.35 Hz to 3.05 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. In VS and NV, gains and phases of head velocity indicated good
compensation for the perturbation at frequencies up to 2 Hz. Between 2-3 Hz,
gains dropped slowly and then steeply descended above 3 Hz as phases became
scattered. 3. In MA, gains were lower and exhibited more scatter than in VS
and NV at frequencies below 1 Hz. Phases around -180 indicated compensatory
activity was occurring even with these low gains. Between 1-2 Hz, response
gains steeply ascended, implying that reflex mechanisms were becoming the
predominant mechanism for compensation in this frequency range. Above 2 Hz,
gains dropped off to 0.5 and lower, but phases remained close to -180
suggesting that the reflex mechanisms were not dominant in this frequency
range, but that they were still contributing toward compensation for the trunk
perturbation. 4. Neck muscle EMG responses were similar in VS, NV, and MA,
demonstrating decreasing gains between 0.35 and 1.5 Hz, and then increasing
beyond the previous high level of activation. This U-shaped response pattern
implies an enhanced participation of neural mechanisms, probably of reflex
origin, in the higher frequency range. 5. Patterns observed during external
perturbations of the trunk were not apparent in the response dynamics of
voluntary head tracking. In VT, subjects successfully tracked the stimulus
only at the lowest frequencies of head movement. A gradual and consistent
decline was exhibited as frequency increased. EMG activation continued
throughout the frequency range, however, suggesting a continued effort to
track the target. 6. A comparison of response dynamics revealed that the
greatest distinction between responses to pseudorandom rotations in the
horizontal and vertical planes existed at very low (< 0.5 Hz) frequencies
and at frequencies above 2 Hz. Low frequency differences reflected improved
gains in the vertical plane. High frequency differences reflected the presence
of resonant oscillations in the horizontal but not in the vertical plane.
Response dynamics at these frequencies might have been the result of a stiffer
head-neck system in the vertical plane due to the combination of smaller
rotational amplitudes and greater muscle moment arms than in the horizontal
plane. 7. The results of this study suggest that head stabilizing mechanisms
are related to both the frequency and orientation of an external perturbation.
Neck reflexes exhibit a greater operational bandwidth in the vertical than in
the horizontal plane, and may function to damp mechanical resonance and free
the voluntary mechanisms for producing an efficient time-matched response to a
continually changing environment.
Received 26 October 1992; accepted in final form 1 February 1995.
APS Manuscript Number J531-2.
Article publication pending J. Neurophysiol.
ISSN 1080-4757 Copyright 1995 The American Physiological Society.
Published in APStracts on 3 April 1995.