Volume 13, Number 4-6
2003
PDF files of all articles are available from IOS
Press.
Return to Issue Contents
Return to Issues
|
 |
Ocular and perceptual responses to linear acceleration in microgravity:
Alterations in otolith function on the COSMOS and Neurolab flights
pp. 377 - 393
Steven T. Moore, Gilles Clément, Mingjai Dai, T. Raphan, D. Solomon, B. Cohen
In this paper we review space flight experiments performed
by our laboratory. Rhesus monkeys were tested before and after
12 days in orbit on COSMOS flights 2044 (1989) and 2229
(1992-1993). There was a long-lasting decrease in post-flight
ocular counter-rolling (70%) and vergence (50%) during
off-vertical axis rotation. In one animal, the orientation of
optokinetic after-nystagmus shifted by 28° from the spatial
vertical towards the body vertical early
post-flight. Otolith-ocular and perceptual responses were also
studied in four astronauts on the 17-day Neurolab shuttle
mission (STS-90) in 1998. Ocular counter-rolling was unchanged
in response to 1-g and 0.5-g Gy centrifugation during and after
flight and to post-flight static roll tilts relative to pre-flight
values. Orientation of the optokinetic nystagmus eye velocity axis
to gravito-inertial acceleration (GIA) during centrifugation was
also unaltered by exposure to microgravity. Perceptual orientation
to the GIA was maintained in-flight, and subjects did not report
sensation of translation during constant velocity
centrifugation. These studies suggest that percepts and ocular
responses to tilt are determined by sensing the body vertical
relative to the GIA. The findings also raise the possibility that
'artificial gravity' during the Neurolab flight counteracted
adaptation of these otolith-ocular responses.
 |