Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
300 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-09-15
2027-09-01
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Aim I: Causal inference (CI) for visual and inertial headings. During natural movements visual and inertial cues occur together. Inertial cues always represent self-motion, visual cues are ambiguous as they can represent motion through a fixed environment, environmental motion relative to the observer, or a combination of both. IA. Techniques for measuring CI for visual and inertial stimuli are not well established. The investigators have developed a technique to measure CI by presenting offset visual and inertial headings simultaneously using a full range of possible directions within the horizontal plane. Subjects report the perceived direction of the visual and inertial stimuli independently and whether or not they share common causation. These trial blocks can be repeated to determine reproducibility. IB. Parameters that influence perception of CI will be varied to determine their relative influences. These parameters will include stimulus timing, duration, and visual field size. It is hypothesized that full-field visual stimuli that are most consistent with the inertial stimulus will be perceived as having common causation. IC. Subjects with unilateral vestibular lesions will be tested using the techniques in IA. These individuals may have increased reliance on visual cues as well as decrease reliability and biases in inertial heading perception. As such, this may cause inertial headings to be more influenced by vision and result in a greater range of common causation.
Aim II: Visual-inertial heading adaptation. Plasticity in vestibular perception has received minimal attention, despite perception being the primary issue in common disorders such as vertigo, motion, and simulator sickness. Better understanding of how adaptation occurs could form the basis for improved therapeutic options as well as better tolerated virtual environments and simulations. IIA. Exposure to visual and inertial headings with similar characteristics, that are systematically offset, will be studied. It is hypothesized that exposure to this situation will influence subsequent visual and inertial heading perception as well as their common causation. These factors will also be measured before and after adaptation. The limits of what types of offsets can induce adaptation, and the range of headings that can be adapted will be explored. IIB. Preliminary data demonstrate that heading adaptation can also be induced by exposure to a virtual environment with an angular velocity offset in the visual stimulus. This method of adaptation will also be studied with regard to its influence on perception of rotation, visual and inertial headings and common causation of these headings. As with IIA, the potential limitations of the method will be explored.
Aim III: Heading adaptation after vestibular loss. Errors in heading perception are a clinically significant problem. Abnormal perception of rotation often quickly normalizes after vestibular lesions, but preliminary data indicate heading perception remains deviated for years afterwards. This could be due to asymmetry in the otolith system which current vestibular rehabilitation methods do not address. Abnormal heading perception may be a significant factor in other disorders including vestibular migraine, dementia, and concussion. Understanding long-term adaptation is potentially important in these populations. IIIA. Time course and etiology of perceptual pathology after acute vestibular lesions is unclear. This will be investigated by sequentially measuring bias and perceptual thresholds of yaw rotation, sway, and heading in individuals with acute loss of vestibular function. Initially subjects have a rotation bias towards the intact side which normalizes over time. The heading bias may correlate with rotational bias or may be related to otolith dysfunction, as measured with sway translation perception, or may occur as a result of adapting to the rotatory vertigo. IIIB. Study of long-term heading adaptation in subjects with chronic unilateral vestibular hypofunction (e.g. those who have had vestibular schwannomas removed, gentamicin ablative therapy for Meniere's disease). Since these subjects often have biased heading perception at baseline, they may be able to exhibit long term adaptation. Heading perception as well as visual-inertial common causation will be measured using the techniques described in Aim IC. Ability to adapt these patients to heading offsets will be measured using the methods established in normal controls (Aim II) but the adaptation will always be in a consistent direction to attempt to normalize baseline deviation in heading perception. It will be determined if durable long-term heading adaptation can be achieved. The proposal aims to understand how visual and inertial cues inform motion perception and how adaptation has the potential to improve pathological perception.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NON_RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
BASIC_SCIENCE
NONE
Study Groups
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Healthy subjects
Heading direction adaptation
Will adapt subject's perceived heading direction using exposure to visual environments that include rotation and situations where visual and inertial heading direction are systematically offset.
Vestibular Disease patients
Heading direction adaptation
Will adapt subject's perceived heading direction using exposure to visual environments that include rotation and situations where visual and inertial heading direction are systematically offset.
Interventions
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Heading direction adaptation
Will adapt subject's perceived heading direction using exposure to visual environments that include rotation and situations where visual and inertial heading direction are systematically offset.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* general good health
Vestibular Disease patients:
* general good health
* specific unilateral or bilateral vestibular loss
Exclusion Criteria
* subjects who are institutionalized or otherwise not self-sufficient.
* enduring sequelae due to diseases of the nervous system, eyes, ears, head and neck, and limbs, except for changes commensurate with normal aging (e.g. presbyacusic hearing loss, mild cataract, etc.).
* abnormal cognitive function, which if in question can be determined as a score of \<27 on the Mini-Mental State test.
* corrected visual acuity worse than 20/20 up to age 65, worse than 20/40 if \>65
* abnormal binocular stereo-acuity or visual fields.
* any defects in cranial nerve, oculomotor, cerebellar/coordination, and somatosensory functions.
* any abnormal oculomotor and vestibular function (caloric tests)
Vestibular Disease patients:
* Inability to perform the study tasks due to sensory, motor, or postural limitations
18 Years
80 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
NIH
University of Rochester
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Benjamin Crane
Associate Professor
Locations
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University of Rochester Medical Center
Rochester, New York, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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3911
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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