The spatial orientation functions of the vestibular system, although clinically relevant, have received little attention compared to reflexes. In the proposed experiments, we intend to characterize the vestibular system's involvement in maintaining spatial constancy for movement planning as humans and primates are passively rotated or translated in three-dimensional (3D) space. This process, referred to as 'visuospatial updating' utilizes extra-retinal signals related to the intervening movement in order to change the end-goal of sensorimotor transformations for eye, hand or limb movements. Although vestibular signals have an important role in this process, spatial constancy has been mostly studied with saccadic ocular deviations, whereas little is currently known about the role of other sources of extra-retinal information. Thus, the long-term goal of these studies is to characterize the functional properties and neural basis for subcortical extra-retinal signals on spatial constancy, with a particular focus on vestibularly-driven mechanisms. Here we propose a series of behavioral and neurophysiological aims to characterize the vestibular system's involvement in visuospatial updating during memory-guided eye movements. Specifically, we will quantify the properties of these processes, as they relate to the numerous computational issues encountered when three-dimensional (3D) vestibular information must be combined with a two-dimensional (2D) retinotopic goal for a saccade. To investigate the neural basis of these interactions, we also propose to characterize visuospatial updating and vestibular memory-contingent saccades after reversible inactivation of each 1 of the 3 cortical eye fields, the lateral intraparietal area (LIP), the frontal eye fields (FEF) and the supplementary eye fields (SEF). Finally, we will also start characterizing the neural correlates of this function by testing whether visual receptive fields of LIP neurons shift during an imposed rotational/translational movement, similarly as previously shown for saccadic eye movements. The proposed studies aim at filling an important gap in knowledge and are fundamental in establishing a causal role for the vestibular system in spatial and sensorimotor functions that, although largely uncharacterized, are important for understanding and treating cognitive deficits of spatial perception. ? ? ?
Acerbi, Luigi; Dokka, Kalpana; Angelaki, Dora E et al. (2018) Bayesian comparison of explicit and implicit causal inference strategies in multisensory heading perception. PLoS Comput Biol 14:e1006110 |
Lakshminarasimhan, Kaushik J; Petsalis, Marina; Park, Hyeshin et al. (2018) A Dynamic Bayesian Observer Model Reveals Origins of Bias in Visual Path Integration. Neuron 99:194-206.e5 |
Zaidel, Adam; DeAngelis, Gregory C; Angelaki, Dora E (2017) Decoupled choice-driven and stimulus-related activity in parietal neurons may be misrepresented by choice probabilities. Nat Commun 8:715 |
Dokka, Kalpana; MacNeilage, Paul R; DeAngelis, Gregory C et al. (2015) Multisensory self-motion compensation during object trajectory judgments. Cereb Cortex 25:619-30 |
Dokka, Kalpana; DeAngelis, Gregory C; Angelaki, Dora E (2015) Multisensory Integration of Visual and Vestibular Signals Improves Heading Discrimination in the Presence of a Moving Object. J Neurosci 35:13599-607 |
Drugowitsch, Jan; DeAngelis, Gregory C; Angelaki, Dora E et al. (2015) Tuning the speed-accuracy trade-off to maximize reward rate in multisensory decision-making. Elife 4:e06678 |
Drugowitsch, Jan; DeAngelis, Gregory C; Klier, Eliana M et al. (2014) Optimal multisensory decision-making in a reaction-time task. Elife 3: |
Angelaki, Dora E (2014) How Optic Flow and Inertial Cues Improve Motion Perception. Cold Spring Harb Symp Quant Biol 79:141-8 |
Zaidel, Adam; Ma, Wei Ji; Angelaki, Dora E (2013) Supervised calibration relies on the multisensory percept. Neuron 80:1544-57 |
MacNeilage, Paul R; Zhang, Zhou; DeAngelis, Gregory C et al. (2012) Vestibular facilitation of optic flow parsing. PLoS One 7:e40264 |
Showing the most recent 10 out of 21 publications