Vestibular control of skeletal geometry in the guinea pig: a problem of good trim?Prog Brain Res. 1993; 97:229-43.PB
Motor control of different segments of the body with multiple degrees of freedom appears to be coordinated by utilizing preferred axes of motor activity. This hypothesis may also be applied to vestibular control of posture. To explore this question we studied the anatomical relationship between the head and the cervical vertebral column by taking radiographs of the head-neck region in unrestrained alert guinea pigs. We determined that biomechanical constraints contribute to the stereotypical skeletal geometry observed in the resting animal and to a functional segmentation of the head-neck movement apparatus. Subsequent lesion studies of vestibular end organs with quantification of the resulting postural syndromes suggest that the functional segmentation of the cervical vertebral column corresponds to a functional partitioning of vestibular afferents. Our findings also indicate that the sensorimotor transformation mechanisms necessary to convert a given head velocity signal into the appropriate neck motor frame are already embedded in the networks provided by second-order vestibular neurons. Good trim of postural control will be the end result of an appropriate internal representation of the objective vertical.