PUBLICATION

Optokinetic set-point adaptation functions as an internal dynamic calibration mechanism for oculomotor disequilibrium

Authors
Lin, T.F., Mohammadi, M., Cullen, K.E., Chacron, M.J., Huang, M.Y.
ID
ZDB-PUB-221104-2
Date
2022
Source
iScience   25: 105335 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Huang, Melody Ying-Yu, Lin, Ting-Feng
Keywords
Biological sciences, neuroscience, sensory neuroscience
MeSH Terms
none
PubMed
36325052 Full text @ iScience
Abstract
Experience-dependent brain circuit plasticity underlies various sensorimotor learning and memory processes. Recently, a novel set-point adaptation mechanism was identified that accounts for the pronounced negative optokinetic afternystagmus (OKAN) following a sustained period of unidirectional optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) in larval zebrafish. To investigate the physiological significance of optokinetic set-point adaptation, animals in the current study were exposed to a direction-alternating optokinetic stimulation paradigm that better resembles their visual experience in nature. Our results reveal that not only was asymmetric alternating stimulation sufficient to induce the set-point adaptation and the resulting negative OKAN, but most strikingly, under symmetric alternating stimulation some animals displayed an inherent bias of the OKN gain in one direction, and that was compensated by the similar set-point adaptation. This finding, supported by mathematical modeling, suggests that set-point adaptation allows animals to cope with asymmetric optokinetic behaviors evoked by either external stimuli or innate oculomotor biases.
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