Literature DB >> 9178227

Eye-head coordination toward auditory and visual targets in humans.

D Zambarbieri1, R Schmid, M Versino, G Beltrami.   

Abstract

Eye-head coordination during gaze orientation toward auditory targets in total darkness has been examined in human subjects. The findings have been compared, for the same subjects, with those obtained by using visual targets. The use of auditory targets when investigating eye-head coordination has some advantages with respect to the more common use of visual targets: (i) more eccentric target positions can be presented to the subject; (ii) visual feedback is excluded during the execution of gaze displacement; (iii) complex patterns of saccadic responses can be elicited. This last aspect is particularly interesting for examining the coupling between the eyes and the head displacements. The experimental findings indicate that during gaze orientation toward a visual or an auditory target the central nervous system adopts the same strategy of using both the saccadic mechanism and the head motor plant. In spite of a common strategy, qualitative and quantitative parameters of the resulting eye-head coordination are slightly different, depending on the nature of the target. The findings relating to patterns of eye-head coordination seem to indicate a dissociation between the eyes and the head, which receive different motor commands independently generated from the gaze error signal. The experimental findings reported in this paper have been summarized in a model of the gaze control system that makes use of a gaze feedback hypothesis through the central reconstruction of the eye and head positions.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9178227

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vestib Res        ISSN: 0957-4271            Impact factor:   2.435


  7 in total

1.  Gaze shifts to auditory and visual stimuli in cats.

Authors:  Janet L Ruhland; Tom C T Yin; Daniel J Tollin
Journal:  J Assoc Res Otolaryngol       Date:  2013-06-08

2.  Auditory and visual orienting responses in listeners with and without hearing-impairment.

Authors:  W Owen Brimijoin; David McShefferty; Michael A Akeroyd
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2010-06       Impact factor: 1.840

3.  Influence of age, spatial memory, and ocular fixation on localization of auditory, visual, and bimodal targets by human subjects.

Authors:  Marina S Dobreva; William E O'Neill; Gary D Paige
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2012-10-14       Impact factor: 1.972

4.  Learning the optimal control of coordinated eye and head movements.

Authors:  Sohrab Saeb; Cornelius Weber; Jochen Triesch
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2011-11-03       Impact factor: 4.475

5.  Evaluation of Speech Intelligibility and Sound Localization Abilities with Hearing Aids Using Binaural Wireless Technology.

Authors:  Iman Ibrahim; Vijay Parsa; Ewan Macpherson; Margaret Cheesman
Journal:  Audiol Res       Date:  2012-12-21

6.  Eye-Head Coordination in 31 Space Shuttle Astronauts during Visual Target Acquisition.

Authors:  Millard F Reschke; Ognyan I Kolev; Gilles Clément
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-10-27       Impact factor: 4.379

7.  On the Interaction of Head and Gaze Control With Acoustic Beam Width of a Simulated Beamformer in a Two-Talker Scenario.

Authors:  Ĺuboš Hládek; Bernd Porr; Graham Naylor; Thomas Lunner; W Owen Brimijoin
Journal:  Trends Hear       Date:  2019 Jan-Dec       Impact factor: 3.293

  7 in total

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