Publication | Closed Access
CLOSING AN OPEN-LOOP CONTROL SYSTEM: VESTIBULAR SUBSTITUTION THROUGH THE TONGUE
208
Citations
14
References
2003
Year
Upright PostureHaptic FeedbackMotor ControlPeripheral Vestibular SystemSocial SciencesCentral Vestibular SystemElectrotactile StimulationKinesiologyHealth SciencesVestibular SystemThe TongueRehabilitationPostural StabilityNervous SystemTactile InformationSensorimotor TransformationNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemHuman MovementPostural Control
The human postural coordination mechanism is an example of a complex closed-loop control system based on multisensory integration [9,10,13,14]. In models of this process, sensory data from vestibular, visual, tactile and proprioceptive systems are integrated as linearly additive inputs that drive multiple sensory-motor loops to provide effective coordination of body movement, posture and alignment [5-8, 10, 11]. In the absence of normal vestibular (such as from a toxic drug reaction) and other inputs, unstable posture occurs. This instability may be the result of noise in a functionally open-loop control system [9]. Nonetheless, after sensory loss the brain can utilize tactile information from a sensory substitution system for functional compensation [1-4, 12]. Here we have demonstrated that head-body postural coordination can be restored by means of vestibular substitution using a head-mounted accelerometer and a brain-machine interface that employs a unique pattern of electrotactile stimulation on the tongue. Moreover, postural stability persists for a period of time after removing the vestibular substitution, after which the open-loop instability reappears.
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