Determinants of Spatial and Temporal Coding by Semicircular Canal Afferents
- 1 May 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 93 (5) , 2359-2370
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00533.2004
Abstract
The vestibular semicircular canals are internal sensors that signal the magnitude, direction, and temporal properties of angular head motion. Fluid mechanics within the 3-canal labyrinth code the direction of movement and integrate angular acceleration stimuli over time. Directional coding is accomplished by decomposition of complex angular accelerations into 3 biomechanical components—one component exciting each of the 3 ampullary organs and associated afferent nerve bundles separately. For low-frequency angular motion stimuli, fluid displacement within each canal is proportional to angular acceleration. At higher frequencies, above the lower corner frequency, real-time integration is accomplished by viscous forces arising from the movement of fluid within the slender lumen of each canal. This results in angular velocity sensitive fluid displacements. Reflecting this, a subset of afferent fibers indeed report angular acceleration to the brain for low frequencies of head movement and report angular velocity for higher frequencies. However, a substantial number of afferent fibers also report angular acceleration, or a signal between acceleration and velocity, even at frequencies where the endolymph displacement is known to follow angular head velocity. These non-velocity-sensitive afferent signals cannot be attributed to canal biomechanics alone. The responses of non-velocity-sensitive cells include a mathematical differentiation (first-order or fractional) imparted by hair-cell and/or afferent complexes. This mathematical differentiation from velocity to acceleration cannot be attributed to hair cell ionic currents, but occurs as a result of the dynamics of synaptic transmission between hair cells and their primary afferent fibers. The evidence for this conclusion is reviewed below.Keywords
This publication has 89 references indexed in Scilit:
- Functional Analysis of Whole Cell Currents From Hair Cells of the Turtle Posterior CristaJournal of Neurophysiology, 2002
- Relationship between Inner-Ear Fluid Pressure and Semicircular Canal Afferent Nerve DischargeJournal of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology, 2002
- How Hearing HappensNeuron, 1997
- Afferent and Efferent Responses from Morphological Fiber Classes in the Turtle Posterior CristaAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1996
- An electrophysiological comparison of solitary type I and type II vestibular hair cellsNeuroscience Letters, 1990
- How the ear's works workNature, 1989
- Tactile sensory coding in the glabrous skin of the human handTrends in Neurosciences, 1983
- Relation of terspike baseline activity to the spontaneous discharges of primary afferents from the labyrinth of the toadfish,Opsanus tauBrain Research, 1978
- Über die Beobachtung der Cupula in den Bogengangsampullen des Labyrinths des lebenden HechtsPflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology, 1933
- THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE VESTIBULAR APPARATUSThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1930