Published in:
01-12-2013 | Original Article
Small effects of neck torsion on healthy human voluntary eye movements
Authors:
M. Janssen, J. de Vries, B. K. Ischebeck, M. A. Frens, J. N. van der Geest
Published in:
European Journal of Applied Physiology
|
Issue 12/2013
Login to get access
Abstract
Purpose
Although several lines of research suggest that the head and eye movement systems interact, previous studies have reported that applying static neck torsion does not affect smooth pursuit eye movements in healthy controls. This might be due to several methodological issues. Here we systematically investigated the effect of static neck torsion on smooth pursuit and saccadic eye movement behavior in healthy subjects.
Methods
In twenty healthy controls, we recorded eye movements with video-oculography while their trunk was in static rotation relative to the head (7 positions from 45° to the left to 45° to right). The subject looked at a moving dot on the screen. In two separate paradigms, we evoked saccadic and smooth pursuit eye movements, using both predictable and unpredictable target motions.
Results
Smooth pursuit gain and saccade peak velocity decreased slightly with increasing neck torsion. Smooth pursuit gains were higher for predictable target movements than for unpredictable target movements. Saccades to predictable targets had lower latencies, but reduced gains compared to saccades to unpredictable targets. No interactions between neck torsion and target predictability were observed.
Conclusion
Applying static neck torsion has small effects on voluntary eye movements in healthy subjects. These effects are not modulated by target predictability.