Volume 13, Number 4-6
2003
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A review of the effects of space flight on the asymmetry of vertical
optokinetic and vestibulo-ocular reflexes
pp. 255 - 263
Gilles Clément
Prolonged microgravity during orbital flight is a unique way
to modify the otolith inputs and to determine the extent of
their contribution to the vertical vestibulo-ocular
reflex (VOR) and optokinetic nystagmus (OKN). This paper reviews the data collected on 10
astronauts during several space missions and focuses on the changes in the up-down
asymmetry. Both the OKN elicited by vertical visual stimulation and the active VOR elicited
by voluntary pitch head movements showed an asymmetry before flight, with upward slow phase
velocity higher than downward slow phase velocity. Early in-flight, this asymmetry was
inverted, and a symmetry of both responses was later observed. An upward shift in the
vertical mean eye position in both OKN and VOR suggests that these effects may be related
to otolith-dependent changes in eye position which, in
themselves, affect slow phase eye velocity.
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