The statistics of the vestibular input experienced during natural self-motion differ between rodents and primates

被引:55
作者
Carriot, Jerome [1 ]
Jamali, Mohsen [1 ]
Chacron, Maurice J. [1 ]
Cullen, Kathleen E. [1 ]
机构
[1] McGill Univ, Dept Physiol, Montreal, PQ, Canada
来源
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON | 2017年 / 595卷 / 08期
基金
加拿大健康研究院; 美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
HORIZONTAL VESTIBULOOCULAR REFLEX; SOFT-TISSUE RESONANCE; BRAIN-STEM NEURONS; HEAD STABILIZATION; INFORMATION-TRANSMISSION; VOLUNTARY CANCELLATION; HUMAN DISCRIMINATION; NERVE AFFERENTS; FIRING BEHAVIOR; MOUSE MODEL;
D O I
10.1113/JP273734
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
It is widely believed that sensory systems are adapted to the statistical structure of natural stimuli, thereby optimizing coding. Recent evidence suggests that this is also the case for the vestibular system, which senses self-motion and in turn contributes to essential brain functions ranging fromthe most automatic reflexes to spatial perception andmotor coordination. However, little is known about the statistics of self-motion stimuli actually experienced by freely moving animals in their natural environments. Accordingly, here we examined the natural self-motion signals experienced by mice and monkeys: two species commonly used to study vestibular neural coding. First, we found that probability distributions for all six dimensions of motion (three rotations, three translations) in both species deviated from normality due to long tails. Interestingly, the power spectra of natural rotational stimuli displayed similar structure for both species and were not well fitted by power laws. This result contrasts with reports that the natural spectra of other sensory modalities (i.e. vision, auditory and tactile) instead show a power-law relationship with frequency, which indicates scale invariance. Analysis of natural translational stimuli revealed important species differences as power spectra deviated from scale invariance for monkeys but not for mice. By comparing our results to previously published data for humans, we found the statistical structure of natural self-motion stimuli in monkeys and humans more closely resemble one another. Our results thus predict that, overall, neural coding strategies used by vestibular pathways to encode natural self-motion stimuli are fundamentally different in rodents and primates.
引用
收藏
页码:2751 / 2766
页数:16
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