| Literature DB >> 31007539 |
Ildar Farkhatdinov1,2, Hannah Michalska3, Alain Berthoz4, Vincent Hayward5.
Abstract
It has been frequently observed that humans and animals spontaneously stabilize their heads with respect to the gravitational vertical during body movements even in the absence of vision. The interpretations of this intriguing behaviour have so far not included the need, for survival, to robustly estimate verticality. Here we use a mechanistic model of the head/otolith organ to analyse the possibility for this system to render verticality 'observable', a fundamental prerequisite to the determination of the angular position and acceleration of the head from idiothetic, inertial measurements. The intrinsically nonlinear head-vestibular dynamics is shown to generally lack observability unless the head is stabilized in orientation by feedback. Thus, our study supports the hypothesis that a central function of the physiologically costly head stabilization strategy is to enable an organism to estimate the gravitational vertical and head acceleration during locomotion. Moreover, our result exhibits a rare peculiarity of certain nonlinear systems to fortuitously alter their observability properties when feedback is applied.Entities:
Keywords: Head stabilization; feedback; nonlinear observability; verticality; vestibular system
Year: 2019 PMID: 31007539 PMCID: PMC6451982 DOI: 10.1098/rspa.2018.0010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Math Phys Eng Sci ISSN: 1364-5021 Impact factor: 2.704