Abstract
Utricular sensitivity and preponderance of the right or left utricle can be assessed by means of the unilateral centrifugation test. In this test, subjects are rotated about an earth vertical axis at a velocity of 400 degrees per second. During the ongoing rotation, the subject is gradually translated 4 cm first to the right, and then to the left, along an interaural axis, to a position at which one utricle becomes aligned with the axis of rotation, and at this point is subjected only to gravitational forces. At this eccentric position, the contralateral utricle is exposed to the combination of gravity and a centrifugal acceleration of 0.4g, corresponding to an apparent roll-tilt of 21.7 degrees. This stimulus induces ocular counterrolling (OCR), which is measured on-line using three-dimensional video-oculography (VOG).
We observed that ocular counterrolling appears as a linear function of the gravito-inertial acceleration tilt of the head centre (GIA
Keywords
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
