Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, April 1, 2000, 20(7):2719-2730
Task-Dependent Constraints in Motor Control: Pinhole Goggles Make
the Head Move Like an Eye
M.
Ceylan1, 2,
D. Y. P.
Henriques1, 2,
D. B.
Tweed1, 3, and
J. D.
Crawford1, 2
1 Medical Research Council Group for Action and
Perception, and 2 Centre for Vision Research and
Departments of Psychology and Biology, York University, Toronto,
Ontario, Canada, M3J 1P3, and 3 Departments of Physiology
and Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5S 1A8
 |
ABSTRACT |
In the 19th century, Donders observed that only one
three-dimensional eye orientation is used for each gaze direction.
Listing's law further specifies that the full set of eye orientation
vectors forms a plane, whereas the equivalent Donders' law for the
head, the Fick strategy, specifies a twisted two-dimensional
range. Surprisingly, despite considerable research and speculation, the biological reasons for choosing one such range over another remain obscure. In the current study, human subjects performed head-free gaze
shifts between visual targets while wearing pinhole goggles. During
fixations, the head orientation range still obeyed Donders' law, but
in most subjects, it immediately changed from the twisted Fick-like
range to a flattened Listing-like range. Further controls showed that
this was not attributable to loss of binocular vision or
increased range of head motion, nor was it attributable to blocked
peripheral vision; when subjects pointed a helmet-mounted laser toward
targets (a task with goggle-like motor demands but normal vision), the
head followed Listing's law even more closely. Donders' law of the
head only broke down (in favor of a "minimum-rotation strategy")
when head motion was dissociated from gaze. These behaviors could not
be modeled using current "Donders' operators" but were readily
simulated nonholonomically, i.e., by modulating head velocity commands
as a function of position and task. We conclude that the gaze control
system uses such velocity rules to shape Donders' law on a
moment-to-moment basis, not primarily to satisfy perceptual or anatomic
demands, but rather for motor optimization; the Fick strategy optimizes
the role of the head as a platform for eye movement, whereas
Listing's law optimizes rapid control of the eye (or head) as a gaze pointer.
Key words:
head movement; head orientation; Donders' law; Listing's law; Fick strategy; gaze saccades; nonholonomic control
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Although the eye is mechanically
able to rotate torsionally (i.e., about the nasal-occipital axis), the
oculomotor system normally chooses just one angle of ocular torsion for
any one gaze direction (Donders, 1848
). Since its discovery, this
Donders' law has been extended to apply to several motor systems whose motion is restricted by the brain to eliminate needless degrees of
freedom (Straumann et al., 1991
; Hore et al., 1992
; Theeuwen et
al., 1993
; Crawford and Vilis, 1995
). For example, Donders' law also
applies to the head, which is mechanically able to rotate torsionally
but which normally adopts just one torsional angle for any one facing
direction (Straumann et al., 1991
; Glenn and Vilis 1992
; Tweed and
Vilis 1992
). However, what are the functional advantages of Donders'
law that caused it to develop in these different motor systems?
Surprisingly, after a century of research and speculation, the answer
is unknown.
One clue, however, is that different body parts obey different forms of
the law. For example, the eye obeys a form of Donders' law called
Listing's law, which means that it assumes only those orientations
that can be reached from a central reference position by rotation about
a fixed axis in a plane (von Helmholtz, 1867
; Ferman et al., 1987
;
Tweed and Vilis, 1990a
). Some geometric consequences of Listing's law
are that the torsional angle of the eye is always zero (when rotational
position is expressed using quaternions) (Westheimer, 1957
) and that
the vectors representing the three-dimensional (3-D) orientations of
the eye are not spread out in a 3-D volume but instead fall in a single
flat surface known as Listing's plane. (See Fig.
1, E and F, for an
illustration of such vectors.) In contrast, the head tends toward a
form of Donders' law called the Fick strategy (Glenn and Vilis, 1992
;
Theeuwen et al., 1993
; Radau et al., 1994
; Tweed et al., 1995
;
Medendorp et al., 1998
; Misslisch et al., 1998
; Crawford et al., 1999
).
As a result of this strategy, the vectors representing 3-D head
orientation do not fall within a plane but rather in a twisted,
saddle-shaped surface, with non-zero torsional components at oblique
facing directions (Fig. 1A-C).

View larger version (44K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Two possible forms of Donders' law of the head:
the Fick pattern (A-C) and Listing's law
(D-F). A, In the Fick pattern,
purely horizontal rotations occur about the illustrated torso-fixed
vertical axis and purely vertical rotations about the illustrated
head-fixed horizontal axis (note the foreshortening of the horizontal
axis in head positions 5 and 1). Shown
are the head positions that would be used to view the nine dots in the
standard target array used in this experiment. B, Front
view (showing horizontal and vertical components) of orientation
vectors for head positions in A, plotted in space-fixed
coordinates. These vectors describe orientation by specifying the
virtual axis of rotation relative to a central reference position; the
vector's length is proportionate to the angle of that rotation. The
right-hand rule applies, e.g., to interpret position 1
in A, point your right thumb upward; then, your fingers
curl leftward, in the direction of rotation. Orientation vectors are
labeled with their corresponding number, e.g., 1 in
B is the orientation vector for final head position
1 in A. C, Same
distribution of orientation vectors in B but viewed from
the side (i.e., vertical vs torsional axes). Note that the torsional
axis in orientation vector coordinates is fixed in space, independent
of head movement. As a result, vectors for positions with zero torsion
in Fick coordinates have non-zero components in these coordinates,
particularly at the corner positions (2,
4, 6, and 8). As shown
previously, the total set of such vectors falls within a twisted,
saddle-shaped distribution (Glenn and Vilis, 1992 ; Radau et al., 1994 ).
D, Head positions hypothetically obeying Listing's law.
Same convention as in A. E,
F, Front and side views of head orientation vectors for
head positions in D. Same convention as in
B and C. The side view shows that the
orientation vectors now lie in a plane in this coordinate system. (For
the head traces in A and D, Matlab coding
courtesy of W. P. Medendorp, J. A. M. Van Gisbergen,
M. W. I. M. Horstink, and C. C. A. M. Gielen, as reported in Medendorp et al., 1999 ).
|
|
Various suggestions have been made as to the functional purpose of
Listing's law, for instance that it optimizes the perception of radial
lines (Hering, 1868
), binocular vision (Crawford and Vilis, 1991
),
saccade paths to and from center (Tweed and Vilis, 1990a
), a
combination of the latter two (Tweed, 1997b
), the visuomotor transformation (Hepp et al., 1997
), or the workload on the eye muscles (Fick, 1858
; Tweed and Vilis, 1990
; Radau et al., 1994
). Similarly, the Fick strategy for the head could optimize the perception of lines on the horizon (Glenn and Vilis, 1992
; Hore et al., 1992
), binocular alignment of the eyes with the horizon (Crawford and Vilis,
1995
), perceived tilt in visual and/or vestibular stimuli (Rock et
al., 1981
; Crawford and Vilis, 1995
; Crawford et al., 1999
), the
workload on the neck muscles (Glenn and Vilis 1992
; Radau et al.,
1994
), the motion of cervical vertebrae (the top two of which are
linked anatomically like Fick gimbals) (Glenn and Vilis, 1992
), or
eye-arm coordination (Straumann et al., 1991
; Theeuwen et al., 1993
).
However, these arguments remain speculative.
Recently, an opportunity to test between most of these possibilities
has presented itself. Crawford et al. (1999)
found that, when monkeys
made gaze shifts while wearing pinhole goggles (opaque glasses that
reduced the visual range to a monocular 8° disk), the twisted,
Fick-like twist distribution of head orientation vectors observed
during gaze fixations (Fig. 1A-C) flattened into something resembling Listing's plane (Fig.
1D-F). Here, we demonstrate a similar
phenomenon in humans, showing that pinhole goggles alter the form of
Donders' law used to restrict head orientation during gaze fixations.
We then use variations on the goggle experiment to determine which of
the following factors are important in shaping this law: binocular
vision, peripheral vision, range of head motion, or motor demands on
the head.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Ten subjects (six female, four male; aged 23-44; without known
eye or head movement disorders) participated, and all signed informed
consent papers before the experiments. The study was preapproved by the
Human Participants Review Subcommittee of York University.
Subjects performed gaze shifts in a lighted room with their torsos
fixed via seatbelts to a stationary chair within three mutually
perpendicular magnetic fields (frequencies 90, 124, and 250 kHz)
generated by Helmholtz coils 2 m across. Three-dimensional head
orientations were measured using magnetic search coils, as described
previously (Tweed et al., 1990
; Glenn and Vilis, 1992
). Unless
otherwise stated below, we used a homemade, 3-D coil attached to a snug
swim cap. The three voltages from each coil were sampled at 100 Hz.
Subjects reported that our gaze-related tasks were easy to perform, but
for additional confirmation, we measured orientation of the right eye
using Skalar (Delft, The Netherlands) search coils. This was done in
the first three subjects in experiment 1 and in four subjects in
experiment 4. Calibration and accuracy were as described previously
(Henriques et al., 1998
; Klier and Crawford, 1998
).
Target arrays. Subjects made eye-head gaze shifts between
white dots (1 cm diameter) on a black tangent screen 1.1 m in
front of them. The "standard target array" consisted of nine dots
arranged in a square grid centered in front of the right eye. The
central target was placed at the intersection of the horizontal
meridian and the parasagittal plane, the four cardinal targets were
40° right, left, above, and below it, and the four oblique targets were 48° from center, in the corners. This array of targets was selected to clearly distinguish between the Fick and Listing
strategies, which give position ranges that mainly differ at the
corners. Some experiments also used a "reduced target array" of two
dots 25° left and right of center, two dots 20° above and below
center, and four oblique targets 28° from center, in the corners.
These dimensions were selected to match the typical range of head
positions seen during normal gaze shifts to targets of the standard array.
At the start of every task (defined in the next section), subjects
fixated the center target to define a reference position. Then, at 2 sec intervals, they were verbally instructed to redirect their gaze to
specific targets, e.g., up-left, down-right, middle-center, as in a
previous gaze-control experiment (Glenn and Vilis, 1992
). Sessions were
divided into 20 sec blocks, each randomized block including one gaze
shift to each of the nine targets, and each task consisted of five
blocks for a total of 100 sec and 45 fixations. Subjects were allowed
to briefly practice each such task before the experiment just to the
point of familiarizing themselves with the instructions.
Experiments. Four experiments were performed, each composed
of a set of tasks designed to test between different hypotheses of
Donders' law of the head. Experiment 1 measured the basic effect of
pinhole goggles on head motion. Subjects performed two tasks: control
and goggle. In the control task (CT), subjects made head-free gaze
shifts to the targets of the standard array. This was done both before
and after other manipulations to account for hysteresis effects, such
as fatigue and practice. In the goggle task (GT), subjects wore opaque
goggles that blocked all vision except through a single monocular
aperture, 5 mm across, that reduced the visual range to 10°. The
aperture was positioned over the right eye at the median of the eye
positions that the first six subjects used when they looked straight
ahead without goggles (in a preliminary test). Wearing the goggles,
subjects made head-free gaze shifts to the targets of the standard
array. Note that the goggles did not allow for peripheral vision of any
target beyond the current fixation point, so subjects had to acquire
these targets based on remembered representations formed during
previous control and practice runs. Only subjects who showed a
significant effect (i.e., an altered Donders' law of the head) in this
experiment went on to participate in the remaining experiments, which
were designed to determine why the effect occurred.
Experiment 2 explored which aspect of the goggle task caused the
changes in head motion: monocular vision, enlarged head movements, factors related to memory, peripheral vision, and/or motor task constraints. Subjects performed five tasks: the CT; the patch task
(PT), wearing no goggles but a patch over the left eye; the GT; the
binocular-goggle task (BG), wearing modified pinhole goggles with an
aperture centered in front of each eye; and the reduced range goggle
task (RG) in which subjects made gaze shifts with the standard goggles
to targets in the reduced array. Subjects also performed a memory
control task (MT) in which they performed gaze shifts between
remembered targets in the dark. This was done after standard controls
but before donning the goggles to avoid contaminating their cognitive set.
Experiment 3 tested whether it was the loss of peripheral vision with
pinhole goggles that altered the pattern of head motion. Subjects wore
a light-weight bicycle helmet (380 gm), which fit tightly over the
swimming cap and was fastened with chin-straps. Attached to the helmet
were a 3-D coil and a laser pointer mounted on top via a universal
joint positioner. Before testing, subjects fixated the center target
with the helmet and goggles on, and the laser was adjusted to point at
the center target. The goggles were then removed, and the subjects
performed three tasks: the control helmet task (CH) in which the laser
was off and subjects made unencumbered gaze shifts to the targets of
the standard array while wearing the helmet; the standard laser task
(LT) in which subjects pointed the laser at targets of the standard
array; and the reduced laser task (RL), using the reduced target array.
Finally, subjects removed the helmet and repeated the control and
goggle tasks (using the standard target array) for comparison.
Experiment 4 tested the idea that head movements obey Donders' law
only when they are part of a gaze shift. Subjects repeated the control
helmet task and then performed a gaze-fixation task (GF) by keeping
their eyes on the center target while turning their heads to point the
laser at targets of the reduced range, i.e., gaze was stationary and
only the head moved. CH and RL were also repeated here as controls.
Data analysis. Reference positions of the head and right eye
were defined by having subjects look straight ahead at the center target. From the raw coil signals, we then computed quaternions (Tweed
and Vilis, 1990a
; Tweed et al., 1990
) to represent the orientations of
the eye in space (Es) and head in
space (Hs) with respect to their
reference positions (Tweed et al., 1990
, 1995
). These quaternions,
Es and
Hs, were expressed in a right-handed coordinate system that was aligned with the Helmholtz coils.
Orientation of the eye in the head
(Eh) were computed from
Es and
Hs orientations as described
previously (Glenn and Vilis, 1992
). Gaze direction and head-facing
direction were expressed as unit vectors that were computed from
quaternions (Tweed et al., 1990
). For 2-D display, these vectors were
projected onto a frontal plane aligned with the horizontal and vertical
magnetic fields.
Previous experiments have shown that, strictly speaking, Donders' law
of the head only holds during head fixations between movements
(Crawford et al., 1999
). In contrast, head movement trajectories do not
generally obey Donders' law (with the possible exception of pure
horizontal or vertical movements). In particular, large oblique
movements clearly violate the Fick constraint, transiently leaving the
twisted Fick surface to take the shortest path between two corners with
a similar torsional twist (Fig. 1C). Moreover, several of
our experiments, such as restricting the visual range, were primarily
relevant to stable fixation points at which the visual information is
gathered, so that any effect on trajectories would only be secondary.
Thus, movement trajectories were not the focus of our analysis.
Instead, to characterize Donders' law, we quantified the 3-D range of
head orientations at fixation points at which head velocity was
<10°/sec. This was done by computing the
Hs surface, which is a second-order
surface of best fit to the Hs
quaternions (Tweed and Vilis, 1990a
; Tweed et al., 1990
; Glenn and
Vilis, 1992
; Theeuwen et al., 1993
; Radau et al., 1994
; Medendorp et
al., 1998
; Misslisch et al., 1998
; Crawford et al., 1999
). A
second-order surface is described by the following equation, which
expresses torsional position (q1) as a
function of vertical (q2) and
horizontal (q3) position:
|
(1)
|
For each task, we also computed its torsional variability, which
quantifies how closely the head orientations cluster around their
Hs surface (Tweed et al., 1990
;
Crawford et al., 1999
). The smaller the torsional variability, the
closer the Hs quaternions adhere to
their surface and therefore the better they conform to Donders' law.
Note that the Fick strategy owes its name to its resemblance, at least
at points of fixation, to the set of orientations describing the
zero-torsion space in Fick coordinates, sometimes implemented mechanically with the use of a nested set of axes called Fick gimbals.
In this instance, the vertical axis would be fixed in the body and the
horizontal axis would be fixed in the head (Fig. 1A).
To quantify the twist in the Hs
surface of fixation points, we computed its gimbal score (s)
(Glenn and Vilis, 1992
; Crawford et al., 1999
), which describes the
dependence of torsion on vertical and horizontal position as
follows:
|
(2)
|
This allowed us to compare surface shapes along a continuum
ranging from the twisted saddle generated by Fick gimbals (gimbal score
of
1), through the plane produced by a system that follows Listing'
law (gimbal score of 0), to the oppositely twisted saddle generated by
Helmholtz gimbals (gimbal score of +1) in which the horizontal axis is
fixed in the body and the vertical in the head. (Intermediate scores
and scores of greater than ±1 are also possible.) Statistical analysis
was performed with the SPSS (Chicago, IL) Statistical Package and
consisted of two-tailed paired-sample t tests unless
otherwise specified.
 |
RESULTS |
General observations: 2-D eye-head coordination
As a prelude to our 3-D analysis, Figure
2 shows the basic way that pinhole
goggles alter 2-D coordination of the eyes and head. These results
confirm previous observations reported for the human (Misslisch et al.,
1998
) and monkey (Crawford and Guitton, 1997
). The three
rows of Figure 2 plot three 2-D variables: the gaze direction of
the eye in space (Es), the facing
direction of the head in space (Hs),
and the pointing direction of the eye relative to the head
(Eh), all sampled while a subject
fixated the nine targets of the standard array. Subjects were able to accurately aim the eye in space, Es,
at the nine targets both under normal conditions (A)
and with pinhole goggles (D). The difference between
the two conditions was in the relative contributions of the eyes and
head to gaze direction.

View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
Frontal projections of two-dimensional pointing
vectors: distribution of gaze, Es
(top row), head, Hs
(middle row), and eye, Eh
(bottom row) positions during control
(A-C) and goggle (D-F)
conditions, as viewed from behind one subject during head-free
fixations toward the nine targets. Data points were selected as final
fixation points at which eye, head, and gaze were <10°/sec. Cardinal
targets were placed at 40° eccentricity and the oblique targets at
48°. Goggles restricted the effective visual range to ~10°
(denoted by the ring in F).
Subject M.C.
|
|
Without goggles (B), the positions of the head in
space, Hs, were variable and rather
close to center, especially vertically, whereas with goggles
(E), Hs positions
were highly consistent and as eccentric as the target dots (with a
slight shift related to eye-pinhole position), as of course they had
to be to get the pinhole pointed at the targets. Without goggles
(C), the positions of the eye relative to the head,
Eh, were variable and covered a wide
range, especially vertically, as in most previous studies (Glenn and
Vilis, 1992
; Crawford and Guitton, 1997
; Freedman et al., 1997
),
whereas with goggles (F),
Eh positions were tightly clustered so
as to look through the small aperture (ring in
F). Thus, subjects wearing pinhole goggles
could still look at targets with great accuracy, but their pattern of
eye-head coordination was changed so that the head was now the prime
mover of gaze (Crawford and Guitton, 1997
; Misslisch et al., 1998
).
Experiment 1: do goggles alter Donders' law of the head
in humans?
In monkeys, pinhole goggles alter the 3-D pattern of head motion
(Crawford et al., 1999
). Figure 3 shows a
similar effect in humans: it plots 12 head movements (large
squares) made by one subject in the control task (top
row) and with goggles (bottom row). For the sake of
clarity, we have only shown horizontal and vertical movements between
the four corner targets. These trajectories, viewed from the front
(A and C) and the side (B and
D), represent the tips of orientation vectors like those
explained in Figure 1. Thus, the right-hand rule applies, e.g., upward
points on the vertical axis signify leftward head and gaze
positions.

View larger version (30K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
Three-dimensional head-in-space trajectories
during movements in the control (A, B)
and goggle (C, D) tasks. Shown are three
horizontal and three vertical movements to each of the four oblique
targets in the standard array. A, C, 2-D
kinematics of head-in-space (large squares) and
eye-in-space (small squares, only in A)
orientations viewed from the front (head-shoulder
caricature indicates space-fixed coordinates) of quaternions
during control (A) and goggle
(C) tasks, using the right-hand rule (horizontal
axis flipped because of frontal view, see Fig. 1 legend).
B, D, 3-D kinematics of head-in-space
orientations showing side projection of quaternion vectors, i.e.,
horizontal position as a function of torsion during the control
(B) and goggle (D) tasks.
Subject M.C.
|
|
In the control task (A), the gaze point (plotted as
smaller squares) was accurately controlled, but the vertical
and horizontal components of head movement were highly variable.
However, these vertical and horizontal movements should stay fairly
close to the Donders' surface of the head (Glenn and Vilis, 1992
;
Crawford et al., 1999
). Indeed, when viewed from the side perspective
(B), these head trajectories formed the classic Fick
twist, like that in Figure 1C. In contrast, with the goggle
task (C), the head movements were larger, as
expected, but more importantly, in the side view (D),
the surface defined by their trajectories was less twisted than the
control surface, and therefore more similar to the plane displayed in
Figure 1F. Could this mean that the head had switched
from the Fick strategy to Listing's law?
To answer this question, we will henceforth focus on head fixation
points, at which Donders' law is known to hold with the greatest
accuracy (Crawford et al., 1999
). Figure
4 plots such end positions for one
subject, recorded in the control task (A) and with
goggles (B). Recall that each task repetition
consisted of nine targets fixated five times each, so the data set for
each such file is derived from 45 independent fixations. Unfortunately, it is difficult to visually derive the 3-D shape of these ranges by
looking at their 2-D projections (Fig.
4A,B). Therefore, as in previous
studies, surfaces of best fit were computed (Eq. 1) (Glenn and Vilis,
1992
; Crawford et al., 1999
; Medendorp et al., 1999
).

View larger version (37K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
Head orientation during fixation of the nine
targets in the control (A, C) and goggle
(B, D) tasks of experiment 1. A, B, Quaternion vectors as viewed from
the side (see caricatures) for subject S.P. during the
control (A) and goggle (B)
tasks. Only fixation points were considered, i.e., at which head speed
was <10°/sec. C, D,
Hs surfaces for the data in A
and B. Each grid indicates 10° horizontal-vertical
across the surface, with a 40 × 40° limit (extent of the range
of data for the goggle condition). The shaded area
reflects the actual data range (i.e., data range of A
and B). Thick lines correspond to the
upper and leftward edges of the fit according to gaze direction.
CCW, Counterclockwise torsion. E, Gimbal
scores (see Materials and Methods). Each bar represents
the average gimbal score across all 10 subjects with SE, for each
paradigm (100 sec intervals), presented in order of their performance
during the experiment. *p < 0.05 indicates a
significant difference from the final control task ( ); two-tailed
t test. F, Torsional variability.
Each bar shows the average torsional variability, in
degrees, and its SE across all 10 subjects for each task, presented in
order of performance. *p < 0.05 indicates a
significant difference from the control task; two-tailed
t test.
|
|
Figure 4, C and D, shows the
Hs surfaces of best fit for the same
data sets. Each square in the grids marks 10°. The
darkened patches on the surfaces approximate the actual
ranges of head motion, but to facilitate comparison, we draw all
surfaces extended over the same 40 × 40° range, which
corresponds to the largest head motions seen. In the control task
(C), the Hs surface
shows the twist characteristic of Fick gimbals;
Hs assumes a counterclockwise orientation in the down-left (DL) and up-right positions
(UR), and a clockwise orientation in the up-left
(UL) and down-right (DR) positions. However, in
the goggle task (D), the
Hs surface becomes much less twisted.
To quantify the twist, we calculated gimbal scores with and without
goggles. Figure 4E shows the average gimbal scores
(and SE) for 10 subjects across all task repetitions, in order of their performance during the experiment, with the hatched bars
representing the control and the white bars representing the
goggle task. During analysis of this experiment (and others with more
than one control), we noticed that the size and intersubject variance
of the control gimbal score dropped after its initial repetition,
presumably because of practice. Therefore, for statistical analysis, we
used the control whose gimbal score was most stable across subjects. In
Figure 4E and subsequent similar figures, significant
differences from this control (
) are indicated by
asterisks. On average, goggles reduced the gimbal score by
56%. This effect was significant compared with controls when tested
across all 10 subjects (p = 0.021). Moreover,
individually, 7 of the 10 subjects showed a statistically significant
flattening of their range. This was accompanied by a slight but
significant increase in torsional variance of the range (Fig.
4F). Thus, in humans as in monkeys (Crawford and
Guitton, 1997
; Crawford et al., 1999
), pinhole goggles flattened the
Hs surface.
Experiment 2: task dependence
The rest of our experiments were designed to determine which
aspect of the goggle task led to the alteration in Donders' law, i.e.,
to determine why this effect occurred. Therefore, these subsequent
experiments were only performed on the seven subjects who individually
showed a significant effect in experiment 1. Typical surfaces fit to
the fixation ranges from experiment 2 are shown in Figure
5A, with gimbal scores for
these surfaces shown in B and torsional thickness
scores in C. Once again, when retested in this experiment,
these subjects showed the surface flattening effect in the GT compared
with CT (Fig. 5A,B). But why?

View larger version (35K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
Head orientation in the ranges during
fixation of the nine targets during the various task-constrained
paradigms of experiment 2. A,
Hs surfaces for each of the six tasks,
viewed from the side of subject M.C. Shaded regions
reflect the actual data range with each surface fitted with a 40 × 40° range for standardization. CCW,
Counterclockwise torsion. B, Quantitative comparison of
the gimbal score. Each bar represents the average gimbal
score across all seven subjects with SE, for each paradigm (100 sec
intervals). *p < 0.05 indicates a significant
difference from the control task ( ); two-tailed t
test. C, Quantitative comparison of the torsional
thickness score of the head orientation range to the second-order
surface. Each bar represents the average torsional
thickness score, in degrees, across all seven subjects with SE, for
each paradigm (100 sec intervals) with the above designations.
*p < 0.05 indicates a significant difference from
the control task; two-tailed t test. The surface fits
(A) are ordered to follow the logical flow of
Results, whereas the quantitative data
(B, C) are arranged to document
the actual order in which tasks were performed during the
experiment.
|
|
We first examined the possibility that the change in the Donders'
surfaces was simply attributable to a change in the 2-D range of
head-facing directions. For instance, subjects wearing pinhole goggles
make unusually large horizontal and vertical head movements. Might this
extended range be what flattens their
Hs surfaces? We shrank the range by
presenting a reduced target array, just 50° across and 40° high
(see Materials and Methods). When subjects looked at these targets
while wearing goggles, their head movements were, on average, no larger
than in the control task. Yet their Hs
surfaces (RG) were still flattened (Fig.
5A,B), with gimbal scores averaging
just
0.61 versus
1.44 in the control case (p = 0.089). Therefore, the size of the head movements did not appear to
be the crucial factor affecting the form of Donders' law.
Another possibility is that the flattening of the Donders' surfaces in
the goggle paradigm (experiment 1) (Fig.
4D,E) was simply attributable to
the concomitant increase in torsional variance (Fig.
4F). In other words, the goggles may have made
Donders' law less precise, and the resulting noise or variability
could have hidden the twist in the Hs
surface. That this was not the case is shown by Figure 5C,
which plots torsional variability from this surface, a measure of the
deviation from Donders' law (see Materials and Methods), for different
tasks. It is true that the torsional variability is larger with goggles
than without (2.2 vs 1.6°; p < 0.005), but this
comparison is unfair because, with goggles, the
Hs surface is also much larger
horizontally and vertically. When we used the reduced target array so
that the range of head motion with goggles was approximately the same as in the control condition without goggles, the torsional variability was actually slightly smaller than normal (1.5 vs 1.6°). Thus, for a
given range of head motion, adherence to Donders' law was not degraded
by wearing goggles, and therefore the surface-flattening effect could
not be attributed to such a degradation.
Furthermore, the effect could not be attributed to the use of
memory-guided movements rather than visually guided movements, because
subjects failed to show the same flattening effect in our MT (Fig.
5A). Although it is true that MT gimbal scores were reduced
slightly relative to controls (Fig. 5B), this difference was
not significant compared with any of the control gimbal scores (smallest, p = 0.135), whereas it was significantly
higher (p = 0.042) than the equivalent goggle
score. This issue will be addressed again in the next section.
A fourth possible reason for the flattening is that the goggles allowed
only monocular vision. However, when subjects made gaze shifts (in the
standard target array) with no goggles but with a patch over the left
eye (PT), their Hs surfaces were still strongly twisted (Fig. 5A,B).
Although the average gimbal score did shrink slightly, from
1.44 to
1.23, the change was not significant (p = 0.415). Thus, blocking vision in one eye did not flatten the
Hs surface, nor did the opposite task
(binocular vision with goggles) twist the surface (Fig.
5A,B, BG); when subjects
wore modified pinhole goggles with a hole for each eye, their
Hs surfaces were still flattened to
the same degree as with the one-hole goggles (average gimbal scores in
both cases being
0.58) and were much flatter than with no goggles
(p = 0.031). Therefore, the presence or absence
of binocular vision did not significantly affect the form of Donders' law.
Experiment 3: peripheral vision versus motor task constraints
A fifth possibility is that Donders' law has something to do with
orienting the peripheral visual field to features in the environment
and that pinhole glasses flatten the
Hs surface because they block out the
periphery. To test this idea, we required a task with the same motor
requirements as the goggle task but with full peripheral vision. For
this, we mounted a laser on a helmet and had subjects point it at
targets of the standard array. This task also had the advantage of
getting rid of the need for memory controls, because the visual aspect
of the task was the same as in normal gaze shifts.
In a control condition (CH), subjects made normal eye-head gaze shifts
to the standard targets array with the helmet on but the laser turned
off. In this task, the Hs surface was
twisted in the normal Fick-like manner (Fig.
6A). However, when
subjects pointed the laser toward the same targets (LT), the surface
was much flatter (Fig. 6B) and the average gimbal
score (Fig. 6D) was significantly smaller (
0.25 vs
1.07; p = 0.01). Thus, the Hs surface still flattened out, even
with full peripheral vision.

View larger version (21K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
3-D head orientation in the tasks of experiment 3. A-C, Hs surfaces of subject
M.S., viewed from the side. A, Control helmet task.
B, Laser task. C, Reduced laser task.
D, Gimbal scores. E, Average torsional
variability across subjects. *p < 0.05 indicates
significance of laser tasks relative to the second control helmet task
( ); two-tailed t test. Otherwise, conventions as
Figure 5.
|
|
To check again for range effects, we asked subjects to point the laser
at targets of the reduced array. The resulting
Hs surface was still relatively flat
(Fig. 6C). The average gimbal score of
0.30 was only
slightly larger than in the LT and significantly smaller
(p = 0.021) than in the CH. In addition, the
gimbal scores for both the LT and RL tasks were even lower than in the
GT, repeated here as a further control (Fig. 6D).
Figure 6E shows that torsional variability, i.e., the
deviation from Donders' law, was slightly but not significantly larger
during the standard LT than in the control helmet and goggle tasks but
again was even lower than normal in the RL. Thus, the head obeyed
Listing's law even more closely in the laser task than in the goggle
task, precluding the idea that this effect is attributable to the loss
of peripheral vision, either for its role in perceiving initial target
direction or in orienting the head to earth-fixed visual structures.
Experiment 4: Donders' law during head-gaze dissociation
In all of our experiments so far in which Donders' law held, head
motion helped to transport the gaze point. For example, gaze and
head-facing direction followed fairly similar 2-D trajectories during
the laser task, as illustrated in Figure
7, A and B.
However, what if the orienting head movement were not part of a gaze
shift? Would Donders' law now break down? To test this hypothesis, we had subjects fix their eyes on the center target and move their heads
to point the laser at the other targets of the reduced array. As seen
in Figure 7, subjects had no trouble maintaining fixation in this task
(C) while pointing their heads with reasonable
accuracy toward the targets (D). The SDs of
horizontal and vertical fixation direction for the entire duration of
this task were only 1.1 and 1.7°, respectively (averaged across the
four subjects who wore eye coils in this task). Thus, this paradigm
effectively dissociated head motion from gaze shifts.

View larger version (47K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
Comparison of gaze control during reduced range
laser task (A, B) and gaze-fixation task
(C, D). 2-D pointing directions are
plotted for gaze (left column) and head-facing direction
(right column) during the entire duration of each task,
showing both trajectories and fixation points in subject M.C. 2-D head
trajectories were slightly more variable in the gaze-fixation task, but
this does not contribute to torsional variability when Donders' law is
being obeyed (Crawford et al., 1999 ).
|
|
The result of this dissociation was immediately evident, even without
sophisticated surface fits (Fig. 8,
top row). Whereas the LT produced a flat, compact range of
data points (B), the gaze fixation task produced a
torsionally scattered range of positions (C). This
was not because of a twist in the range; the gaze fixation task
produced an Hs surface
(F) that was less twisted than normal (D), with a gimbal score (Fig. 8G,
GF) of just 0.29, significantly smaller than in the
control helmet task (p = 0.005). Instead, as
predicted, the torsional thickness of the head range showed a
substantial increase (Fig. 8H). The SD of this range
from its surface of best fit, at 3.14°, was significantly larger than
the CH (1.86°; p = 0.031; one-tailed t
test) and the RL (1.59°; p = 0.029; one-tailed
t test). Thus, when head movement was dissociated from gaze,
Donders' law of the head broke down.

View larger version (19K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 8.
3-D head orientation in the tasks of experiment 4. A-C, Quaternion vectors in side view for subject S.P.
A, Control helmet task. B, Reduced laser
task. C, Gaze-fixation task. D-F,
Hs surfaces for the data in
A-C. G, Gimbal scores.
*p < 0.05 indicates a significant difference from
the control helmet task; two-tailed t test.
×p < 0.05 indicates a significant difference from
the control helmet task; one-tailed t test.
H, Torsional variabilities. *p < 0.05 indicates a significant difference from the control helmet;
one-tailed t test. +p < 0.05 a
significant difference from the reduced laser task; one-tailed
t test. Otherwise, conventions as in Figures 4 and
5.
|
|
To understand this relaxation or violation of Donders' law, we looked
at the axes of head rotation. Because angular velocity (i.e., the
instantaneous axes of rotation) determines changes in orientation,
kinematic constraints can be described in terms of either orientation
or velocity (Tweed and Vilis, 1990
). However, velocity axes are
more useful for illustrating certain aspects of these constraints. For
example, in the Fick strategy, the vertical axis (for horizontal head
rotation) stays fixed in space independent of head position (Glenn and
Vilis, 1992
; Crawford et al., 1999
), whereas for Listing's law, the
vertical axis tilts by half the angle of vertical eye position (Tweed
and Vilis, 1990
). In contrast to both of these strategies, axes
of head rotation remained head-fixed (orthogonal to facing direction)
in our gaze dissociation task (Fig.
9A-C), a strategy that
transports the facing direction using the smallest possible head
rotation. It is well known that such a strategy is inconsistent with
Fick, Listing, or indeed with any form of Donders' law, because it
produces torsional tilts as a function of initial position (Tweed and
Vilis, 1990
, 1992
). However, such torsional deviations must
cancel out across randomly directed movements, producing the thick,
flat distribution that was observed in Figure 8C.

View larger version (24K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 9.
Minimum-rotation strategy observed during the
head-gaze dissociation task. A, Head facing upward
targets. B, Head facing forward targets.
C, Head facing downward targets. Each
panel shows two oppositely elongated (one upward and one
downward) angular velocity loops, for one leftward and one rightward
head movement, respectively. Each point along these
loops defines the instantaneous axis and speed of head rotation, as a
vector emanating from the origin. Vectors pointing rightward (i.e.,
forward for the subject) show the facing direction of the head during
the rightward (hatched line) and leftward (dotted
line) movements. Corresponding vertical lines
show the perpendiculars to these facing vectors, which aligned closely
with the angular velocity loops. Thus, as indicated by the
caricatures, the vertical axis of head rotation remained
orthogonal to head-facing direction, in contrast to the space-fixed
vertical axes observed during normal random gaze shifts.
|
|
Other geometric aspects of the
Hs range
So far, we have quantified Hs
surfaces using only gimbal scores. To measure other properties of these
surfaces, we examined the six coefficients of the second-order fit (Eq. 1), each of which quantifies some aspect of surface geometry (Glenn and
Vilis, 1992
; Medendorp et al., 1998
; Crawford et al., 1999
). Figure
10 shows the six parameters for each of
the 10 tasks (A-J), averaged across the seven
subjects who participated in all four experiments.

View larger version (27K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 10.
Average parameters
(a1-a6)
of the Hs surfaces for each task, across all
four experiments. A-I, Means and SEs across subjects
during control (A), patch
(B), monocular goggle (C),
reduced range goggle (D), binocular goggle
(E), memory control (F),
control helmet (G), laser
(H), laser reduced
(I), and gaze fixation
(J) conditions. For comparison, the dotted
line in A-F marks the twist score
(a5) for the control task
(A) and, in G-J, the twist score
(a5) for the control helmet task
(F). *p < 0.05 indicates a
significant difference from zero; two-tailed t
test.
|
|
The first parameter, a1, quantifies
the torsional shift of the surface away from the reference position.
Averaged a1 scores were small (
0.009
to 0.0042) and never significantly different from 0. Parameter
a2 describes the dependence of torsion
on vertical Hs position. Average
a2 scores were also small in all tasks
(
0.013 to 0.025) and never significant. The
a3 scores, quantifying the dependence
of torsion on horizontal Hs position,
varied more across tasks (
0.118 to 0.239) and differed significantly
from zero in several of the tasks: goggle tasks, Figure 10,
C (
0.107; p = 0.0015), D
(
0.050; p = 0.034), and E (
0.079;
p = 0.0073); and laser tasks, H (
0.118;
p = 0.0054) and I (
0.078;
p = 0.043). These negative scores describe the backward
tilts observable in Figures 6B (laser task) and
8E (reduced laser task), which reflect the tendency of the head to roll clockwise when facing right and counterclockwise when facing left.
Parameter a4 describes the curvature
along the torsional axis with vertical eye position. The range of
a4 scores (
0.269 to 0.03) was small
across paradigms and not significantly different from zero, except
during the control helmet task (Fig. 10G) in which it was
0.269 (p = 0.009). This negative score means
that the head rolled counterclockwise when tilting up or down.
Parameter a6 similarly describes the
curvature along the torsional axis with horizontal eye position. Its
range (
0.192 to 0.022) was also small across tasks, and it differed
significantly from zero for only one task, reduced goggles
(D) in which it was
0.09; (p = 0.046). This negative value means that the head rolled
counterclockwise when facing left or right.
Finally, the fifth parameter,
a5, describes the twist of the
Hs surface. This parameter, which is
closely related to our gimbal score, was the largest of the six and the
only one that was significantly different from zero in all tasks. It
also varied the most between tasks (
0.290 to
1.341), although it
was almost always negative, indicating a consistent Fick-gimbal-like
twist in the surface. These results, showing little systematic
variation in any surface property except twist, suggest that the gimbal
score used in Figures 4-8 captured the major effects of our various paradigms.
Simulations
Given that most of the variation in our
Hs surfaces could be described with a
single variable, the gimbal score, it follows that an adjustable
Donders' operator could be controlled by a neural signal with just one
degree of freedom. We called this hypothetical Donders' box the
"gimbal operator." The detailed math for this model is given in the
Appendix. This model was capable of simulating the main results from
experiments 1-3. However, it failed to explain other aspects of head
motion, such as the minimum-rotation behavior observed in Figures 8 and
9. To fit this third mode into a unified scheme with the Listing and
Fick strategies, a new approach was required.
The latter was satisfied by implementing the constraints at the level
of velocity commands rather than position commands (Fig. 11). All three modes of head control
(Fick, Listing, and minimum rotation) can be expressed as velocity
rules, so all three can be modeled using an adjustable "velocity
box." The detailed mathematical implementation of this scheme is
provided in the legend for Figure 11. In brief, we supposed that head
movements are driven by a 2-D command that specifies nothing about head
torsion but encodes the desired facing direction or its desired motion.
We then assumed a feedback signal that codes current head position.
This signal might also be 2-D, but it can be shown that such an
arrangement is limited in its capabilities and leads to implausible
behavior, so it is more likely that the feedback codes all three
dimensions of head position. These two signals, desired facing
direction or motion and actual head position, were fed into the
velocity box, which computed the correct 3-D velocity command to drive the head toward its target. As shown in Figure
12, this arrangement of control signals
was capable of simulating the Fick strategy (A,
B), Listing's law (C, D), or the
random violations of Donders' law produced by the minimum-rotation
strategy (E, F), simply by switching the internal parameters of the velocity box with the use of a
third, task-dependent input.

View larger version (10K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 11.
Velocity rule model of head control during gaze
shifts. Desired change in 2-D head facing direction
( Fd) is input to a velocity box,
which uses information about current head orientation and task mode to
compute the correct 3-D velocity command for the head. The latter is
also input to a velocity-to-position transformation
(V-P-T), which estimates current head orientation
(Tweed and Vilis, 1987 ). This head orientation signal can be used to
control head posture in the feedforward direction but is also fed back
to the velocity box. As the movement proceeds, the velocity command
shrinks toward zero, as in any negative-feedback loop. A task mode
input sets the internal parameters of the velocity box, as follows. All
three modes of head control (Fick, Listing, and minimum rotation) can
be expressed as velocity rules. In each mode, the
angular-velocity vector of the head must lie in a certain
velocity plane, which is a function of the facing direction. Suppose
f is a unit vector (a vector of length 1) pointing in
the facing direction, N is a unit vector orthogonal to
the velocity plane, and i, j, and
k are body-fixed unit vectors pointing forward, left and
up. Then, the various head constraints we have considered take the
following forms. The minimum-rotation strategy says that
N = f, i.e., the velocity vector
must be orthogonal to the current facing direction; the Fick pattern
says that N is obtained by rotating f
into the horizontal plane, i.e., NFick = k × (f × k), if we normalize this vector (stretch it out to make
its length 1); the Helmholtz pattern says that N is f
rotated into the sagittal plane, i.e.,
NHelmholtz = j × (f × j) normalized; and
Listing's law, as usual, is halfway between Fick and Helmholtz:
NListing bisects the angle between
NFick and
NHelmholtz; equivalently,
NListing bisects the angle between
f and i, so that
NListing = f + i normalized.
|
|

View larger version (25K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 12.
Simulations of the velocity rule model of head
control. Each row plots four movements that take the
facing direction clockwise between the four oblique targets of the
standard array, at 48° eccentricity. Corresponding movements (labeled
1-4) are viewed from the front (left
column) and side (right column) perspectives.
A, B, The model operates in Fick-gimbal
mode, so that in the side view the head-position trajectories trace out
a twisted bow-tie shape. C, D, In Listing
mode, the trajectories stay in the zero torsion Listing's plane.
E, F, Minimum-rotation mode puts no
bounds on torsion. In these simulations, each movement starts from
Listing's plane (torsional starting position is arbitrary in this mode
because it would depend on the previous movement history). All four
movements carry the head clockwise, so if each started where the
previous one ended, clockwise torsion would accumulate. Similarly,
movements in the opposite direction would cause counterclockwise
accumulation, whereas randomly directed movements would cause a general
increase in torsion like that observed in our gaze dissociation task
(Fig. 8C). Note that the corner positions of the head
differ from mode to mode in the torsional, vertical, and horizontal
dimensions, although all of these positions point the facing direction
at the same four oblique targets.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Our results demonstrate four new findings. First, most people can
switch between different patterns of head control depending on the
motor task. Obviously, one can move one's head almost any way one
likes by voluntarily controlling all three dimensions of its motion,
but in some situations, including many orienting tasks, the torsional
dimension is instead set automatically by unconscious control modules
in the brain. Our results suggest that, in different gaze tasks, these
control modules set torsion to obey different forms of Donders' law.
Second, more importantly, we have ascertained the functional factors
that determine the choice between these laws. Third, when head motion
was dissociated from eye motion, Donders' law of the head broke down.
This suggests that the mechanisms underlying Donders' law are part of
the gaze system, although of course other head motor tasks besides gaze control may obey their own forms of the law. Finally, we have demonstrated a new, more powerful way to model these control systems: with the use of velocity constraints.
Purpose of Listing's law versus the Fick strategy
During normal eye-head gaze shifts, the head moves in a Fick
pattern (Glenn and Vilis, 1992
; Radau et al., 1994
; Misslisch et al.,
1998
). Here, we have shown that, when a subject dons pinhole goggles,
the pattern of head motion usually changes to resemble Listing's law.
The same thing was earlier found in monkeys (Crawford et al., 1999
),
but whereas monkeys had to be trained extensively on the goggle task,
humans learned it immediately. Moreover, most of these subjects' head
movements showed an immediate switch from the Fick strategy toward
something more closely resembling Listing's law. This finding suggests
that either their motor control circuits already contained a subcircuit
for Listing's law or these circuits are capable of very rapid
adaptation. More importantly, the versatility of our human subjects
allowed us to use several different tasks to track down the
determinants of this pattern switching.
Our second and third experiments showed that the switch was not
triggered by altered vision; it occurred whether or not vision in one
eye or in the retinal periphery was blocked. So it appears that the
choice between the Fick pattern and Listing's law was not primarily
guided by factors serving binocular or peripheral vision. Of
course Donders' laws of the head and eye do have important implications for these aspects of vision, but our results suggest that
vision is not the main factor shaping the range of head motion.
Instead, the crucial factor appears to be the motor role of the head.
In normal gaze shifts, the eyes point gaze at visual targets and the
head is essentially a platform for the eyes. However, whenever the head
becomes a pointer of gaze like the eye, it adopts a motion pattern like
that of the eye. This happened with pinhole goggles, when the head
became the prime mover of the gaze line, but even more so with a
helmet-mounted laser in which the head was solely responsible for
pointing the beam. For a pointer, Listing's law is an efficient
strategy because it redirects the facing direction using the smallest
possible rotations toward and away from some central, primary position.
Thus, it helps aim the pointer quickly. In contrast, when the head acts
merely as a platform, it plays a smaller role in getting the eye on
target quickly and so becomes free to optimize other variables besides
speed. In this case, the Fick pattern is attractive because it
prevents the head from rolling sideways relative to gravity. The head
tilts forward and back, but in the torsional plane, it stays always
balanced on the vertebral column, easing the workload on the neck muscles.
If the purpose of Listing's law is to redirect the pointer quickly,
why not use other strategies that are even faster? Fastest of all is
the minimum-rotation strategy, which always rotates the head about an
axis orthogonal to the facing direction (Tweed and Vilis, 1992
).
However, a problem with this strategy, as demonstrated in our gaze
dissociation task, is that it is incompatible with any form of
Donders' law, and therefore it allows torsion to accumulate. During
gaze shifts, this strategy has only been observed transiently during
back-and-forth head motion in which the resulting torsion cancels out
(Tweed and Vilis, 1992
; Crawford et al., 1999
). The only general way to
preserve Donders' law and still take the fastest route, i.e., a
fixed-axis rotation, between any two head positions is to obey
Listing's law. With any other form of Donders' law, one must either
violate the law in transit (Crawford et al., 1999
) or take an indirect
route with a nonfixed axis, so in this sense Listing's is the fastest
form of Donders' law. Our data suggest that the choice between these
strategies is governed by issues of motor performance, whereas the
underlying purpose of Donders' law is to prevent accumulation of torsion.
Implications for the control system
How then does the gaze-control system switch between different
forms of Donders' law for the head? One possibility is that the brain
contains two Donders' operators for the head, one for Fick and one for
Listing. Another possibility is that there is just one Donders'
operator, but it is adjustable. By "turning a knob" somewhere in
the neural circuit, the brain could twist the
Hs surface into a Fick shape or
flatten it into a Listing's plane (see Appendix for math). Given that
most of the variation in our Hs
surfaces could be described with a single variable, the gimbal score,
it follows that an adjustable gimbal operator could be controlled by a
neural signal with just one degree of freedom. However, the gimbal
operator fails to explain some modes of head motion, such as the
minimum-rotation behavior that is used when subjects look back and
forth repeatedly between two targets (Tweed and Vilis, 1992
; Crawford
et al., 1999
) and that was also observed in our gaze dissociation task.
An attractive alternative is to implement the constraints at the level
of velocity commands rather than position commands (Fig. 11). This
approach is more general because many constraints, called nonholonomic,
simply cannot be expressed in terms of position alone
(Wongchaisuwat et al., 1984
) but can be expressed in terms of the
velocities that are permitted in different positions. An example is the
minimum-rotation constraint; transporting the gaze line with the
smallest possible rotation is not a matter of staying within some range
of positions but of choosing the right velocity given your starting
position and the location of the visual target.
Therefore, we modeled this control system as a velocity box
(Fig. 11) with inputs encoding both the desired 2-D facing direction of
the head (or its desired motion) and a feedback signal encoding 3-D
head orientation. This scheme provides considerable flexibility. For
example, Crawford et al. (1999)
pointed out that previously existing
(i.e., holonomic) models cannot account for departures of the head from
the Fick surface during oblique movements unless the Donders' operator
is outside of the motor feedback loop. However, this is no longer a
constraint in nonholonomic modeling. Another major advantage of
the velocity-based model over most previous models is that it satisfies
position-dependent constraints in motor control without using explicit
commands (such as "desired head orientation") that are not evident
in actual brainstem physiology (Freedman and Sparks, 1997
).
In the case of gaze tasks, the neural signal coding change in desired
facing direction might arise from the superior colliculus, which
appears to contain a map of desired gaze shifts (Tomlinson and Bahra,
1986
; Galiana and Guitton, 1992
; Freedman and Sparks, 1997
; Goosens and
Van Opstal, 1997
). This 2-D gaze error signal could interact with eye-
and head-position feedback in the velocity box to produce a 3-D command
for head velocity. In our fourth experiment, though, the gaze error was
zero, so the head commands likely arose outside the colliculus, perhaps
in the basal ganglia (Medendorp et al., 1999
). Such commands would seem
to bypass any sort of Donders' operator (Medendorp et al., 1999
), but
they might still pass through the velocity box that we have proposed.
In either case, the output of this box would then drive the movement and could also be input to a velocity-to-position transformation (Fig.
11) that computes the tonic signals required to maintain final head
posture, much like those observed in the oculomotor system (Crawford et
al., 1991
). For example, as with the eye, the correct level of
torsional head tilt appears to require a delicate balance in tonic
activity between the right and left midbrain reticular formation
(Brandt and Dieterich, 1994
; Klier et al., 1999
; Wang et al.,
1999
).
To compute its commands in a flexible way, the velocity box must
operate in different modes, including Fick, Listing, minimum rotation,
and perhaps others. As illustrated in Figure 11, this could be
implemented by a separate "mode" input to the velocity box that
specifies which pattern the velocity commands are to fit, adjusting the
motion to the current task. The choice between modes may also be
influenced by the source of the input, e.g., 2-D gaze error signals
from the superior colliculus would normally undergo Fick processing,
whereas inputs from elsewhere are handled differently. A similar
flexible, nonholonomic system may also control the arms, which, like
the head, obey Donders' law in some tasks (Straumann et al., 1991
;
Hore et al., 1992
; Theeuwen et al., 1993
) and violate it systematically
so as to minimize kinetic energy in other situations (Soechting et al.,
1995
). In this regard, our model is consistent with the conclusions of
a recent study that suggested that the arm is also under the control of
velocity constraints (Nishikawa et al., 1999
) and thus may have
useful applications in other areas of motor control.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 7, 1999; revised Jan. 20, 2000; accepted Jan. 20, 2000.
This study was funded by a Canadian Medical Research Council (MRC)
Grant MT-13357 to J.D.C. J.D.C. is supported by an MRC Scholarship, D.Y.P.H. by an E. A. Baker Foundation-Canadian
National Institute for the Blind/MRC Doctoral Research Award, and D.T. by an MRC Scientist Award.
Correspondence should be addressed to J. D. Crawford, Department
of Psychology, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario,
Canada, M3J 1P3. E-mail: jdc{at}yorku.ca.
 |
APPENDIX |
Adjustable gimbal operator for the head
The details of this operator depend on the coordinate system,
quaternions, Fick angles, etc., that is used to represent head rotations, and apart from some preliminary evidence (Masino and Knudsen, 1993