The goal of these experiments is to determine the mechanisms that permit humans to stabilize their heads during body movements and to make smooth, accurate head movements. Sophisticated systems analysis techniques will be used to characterize two classes of mechanisms and to analyze their interactions. The class of mechanisms comprising neurally generated motor commands to the neck muscles will be studied by observing electromyographic activity of muscles that produce horizontal rotations of the head and the head torques or movements related to that activity. The second class of mechanisms comprising mechanically generated torques will be studied at the level of torque and movement measurement before and after head mechanical properties have been altered by adding mass to the head. One important question to be answered is whether short latency vestibulocollic and cervicocollic reflexes make an important contribution to head stabilization and whether their action varies with behavioral context. A second question concerns how these reflexes interact with mechanical forces and forces generated by longer latency voluntary motor commands. The ultimate answer to these and other questions will come from the preparation of a biomechanical model that describes head stabilization and head movements in terms of neural pathways and physical parameters that control head motion. The three lines of experimentation proposed in this grant are designed to converge upon the generation and thorough testing of such a model. It is expected that such a model when completed will be extremely useful both in understanding normal head movements and in diagnosing and treating the many disorders that impair head stability and motility.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01NS022490-02
Application #
3404950
Study Section
Orthopedics and Musculoskeletal Study Section (ORTH)
Project Start
1985-09-01
Project End
1989-02-28
Budget Start
1987-03-01
Budget End
1988-02-29
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
1987
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Northwestern University at Chicago
Department
Type
School of Medicine & Dentistry
DUNS #
005436803
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60611
Statler, K D; Keshner, E A (2003) Effects of inertial load and cervical-spine orientation on a head-tracking task in the alert cat. Exp Brain Res 148:202-10
Chen, K J; Keshner, E A; Peterson, B W et al. (2002) Modeling head tracking of visual targets. J Vestib Res 12:25-33
Keshner, E A (2000) Modulating active stiffness affects head stabilizing strategies in young and elderly adults during trunk rotations in the vertical plane. Gait Posture 11:11-Jan
Keshner, E A; Hain, T C; Chen, K J (1999) Predicting control mechanisms for human head stabilization by altering the passive mechanics. J Vestib Res 9:423-34
Peng, G C; Hain, T C; Peterson, B W (1999) Predicting vestibular, proprioceptive, and biomechanical control strategies in normal and pathological head movements. IEEE Trans Biomed Eng 46:1269-80
Perlmutter, S I; Iwamoto, Y; Baker, J F et al. (1999) Spatial alignment of rotational and static tilt responses of vestibulospinal neurons in the cat. J Neurophysiol 82:855-62
Perlmutter, S I; Iwamoto, Y; Barke, L F et al. (1998) Relation between axon morphology in C1 spinal cord and spatial properties of medial vestibulospinal tract neurons in the cat. J Neurophysiol 79:285-303
Perlmutter, S I; Iwamoto, Y; Baker, J F et al. (1998) Interdependence of spatial properties and projection patterns of medial vestibulospinal tract neurons in the cat. J Neurophysiol 79:270-84
Keshner, E A; Statler, K D; Delp, S L (1997) Kinematics of the freely moving head and neck in the alert cat. Exp Brain Res 115:257-66
Graf, W; Keshner, E; Richmond, F J et al. (1997) How to construct and move a cat's neck. J Vestib Res 7:219-37

Showing the most recent 10 out of 17 publications