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1 e pain by coughing, breath-holding or sudden head movement).
2 175 ms period one visual latency before the head movement.
3 echanosensors for the detection of sound and head movement.
4 a member of the skeletomuscular family, the head movement.
5 mechanoreceptor cells that detect sound and head movement.
6 easured attenuation correction, or excessive head movement.
7 o track directional heading based on angular head movement.
8 r the correct translational component of the head movement.
9 ere studied during a task requiring vertical head movement.
10 axonal injury even with strict prevention of head movement.
11 ressions varying in intensity, duration, and head movement.
12 ction once this item comes into the FoV by a head movement.
13 ration and peak velocity for each individual head movement.
14 hose that do seem to be highly influenced by head movement.
15 speed, prolonged swing phase, and increased head movement.
16 ubnanometer deflections produced by sound or head movement.
17 subjects with different predispositions for head movement.
18 nalysis approaches, but heavily dependent on head movement.
19 ay from the stimulus and suppresses foraging head movements.
20 Patients should avoid sudden head movements.
21 f the visual scene results from the animal's head movements.
22 added difficulty imposed by our own eye and head movements.
23 distinguish actively generated from passive head movements.
24 symmetry of whisker movements in response to head movements.
25 ary and become increasingly important during head movements.
26 tural and functionally relevant bandwidth of head movements.
27 integrating sensory inputs to guide eye and head movements.
28 lar reflexes stabilize retinal images during head movements.
29 to maintain stable binocular fixation during head movements.
30 le imaging was possible except during sudden head movements.
31 rt, on angular path integration of the rat's head movements.
32 n lens optical density, pupil size, or small head movements.
33 een shown to stabilize vision during angular head movements.
34 of a number of different behaviors involving head movements.
35 ted within visual feedback in the control of head movements.
36 esirable self-perturbations during voluntary head movements.
37 code relating to various features of eye and head movements.
38 r system alters the statistical structure of head movements.
39 ideo analysis of subject's and interviewer's head movements.
40 of sound frequencies and intensities or from head movements.
41 w mouse primary visual cortex (V1) processes head movements.
42 ts adjust neural activity sensitive to rapid head movements.
43 ges, rendering them inadequate for signaling head movements.
44 es and predicts the onset of spatially tuned head movements.
45 ccurate self-motion estimation during active head movements.
46 ive visual neurons regulate gaze-stabilizing head movements.
47 otor system, was proposed for the control of head movements.
48 channels to mediate perception of sound and head movements.
49 in reality they are seated and only allowed head movements.
50 ntly encoded tilt, rather than translational head movements.
51 uires efference copies of self-generated eye/head movements.
54 These "whisking" movements are modulated by head movement [4] and by vibrissal sensory input [5, 6]
56 As we navigate through the world, eye and head movements add rotational velocity patterns to the r
58 dicts that saccadic eye movements and normal head movements after vitrectomy and gas tamponade genera
60 standing balance, vestibular signals encode head movement and are transformed into coordinates that
61 As bridge B1a is predicted to constrain 30S head movement and B4, B7a and B8 are predicted to constr
62 tural MRI and FDG-PET were less sensitive to head movement and had superior diagnostic accuracy than
64 iring rates of cells that carry both sensory head movement and motor-like signals during rotation wer
66 in the vestibular system (hair cells) encode head movements and drive central motor reflexes that con
67 encoding of signals generated during natural head movements and for comparison with coding strategies
69 ation', indicated by an increase in vertical head movements and greater time taken to switch floors.
70 ht-dependent switch in the response of V1 to head movements and identifies a circuit in which SOM cel
72 ell system receive information about angular head movements and that this information be combined wit
73 ception flights to catchable prey, while the head movements and the predictive takeoff ensure flights
74 ar end organs are not passive transducers of head movements and their sensory signal transmission is
78 s obtained when subjects produced full-sized head movements and were reduced when subjects were instr
79 ic activation of HS cells elicits robust yaw head movements and yaw turning responses in fixed and te
80 -pharyngeal pumping, defecation, locomotion, head movement, and avoidance response to an aversive sti
81 ertical and horizontal eye movements and 3-D head movement, and calculated where gaze intersected the
82 affecting olfaction as well as mastication, head movement, and ventilation, and suggest evolutionary
83 r organs always transduce the same signal of head movement, and with natural stimuli can only be acti
84 develop the idea of a neural integrator for head movements, and finally discuss its putative role in
85 .0 mg/kg progressively increased locomotion, head movements, and sniffing, whereas after 5.0 mg/kg be
87 and mobile RRDs, we found that a doubling of head movement (angular velocity) correlated with a media
88 cannot be explained by theta power changes, head movement, antipsychotics, cannabis use, or IQ, and
90 natural head-free fixation, when microscopic head movements are also continually present [11-13].
91 urrently without any apparent tradeoffs when head movements are coupled correctly with the movements
94 cturnal hawkmoth Daphnis nerii, compensatory head movements are mediated by combined visual and anten
102 nding challenges a long-held assumption that head movements are simply an unintended consequence of u
105 c recordings showed essential elimination of head movement artifacts from the recorded eye movements.
106 rse stochastic patterns in their spontaneous head movements as early as 1-2 months after birth, relat
107 PV cells were nearly as sensitive to active head movements as they were to passive head movements du
111 ings with a head tracking system showed that head movements, at least up to some extent, do not influ
112 or colliculus generates and controls eye and head movements based on signals from different senses.
114 fferentially sensitive to active and passive head movements both during and after gaze saccades due p
115 ype II PV neurons were insensitive to active head movements both during and after gaze saccades.
117 motor events including locomotion, grooming, head movement, chewing, auditory stimuli, and whisker mo
118 ginates downstream of the point in which the head movement command diverges from the generalized gaze
122 end of an effective stimulus to the start of head movement decreased with repeated stimuli and this e
123 s caused by loss of sensory input for rotary head movements (detected by cristae ampullaris) and not
126 calculated the trial-to-trial variability of head movement duration and peak velocity for each indivi
129 owever, that even small (</=1 mm) amounts of head movement during scanning can disproportionately bia
130 a mechanism for separate control of eye and head movements during and after saccadic gaze shifts.
132 esence of a population of minor ("residual") head movements during eye-only saccades, distinct from t
135 horizontal, vertical, and torsional in-plane head movements during pupil and iris crypt-based video-o
136 he dynamic interactions of eye movements and head movements during reading with the PALs appear to be
138 P and EHV neurons were insensitive to active head movements during saccadic gaze shifts, and exhibite
139 neurons were less sensitive to on-direction head movements during the VOR after gaze saccades, while
141 Hz) extend beyond the frequency bandwidth of head movements experienced during everyday activities (0
146 ecisions were associated with an increase in head movements for participants with poorer attention sw
150 ent composition of three types of horizontal head movements generated by nonhuman primates: head-alon
151 nly saccades, distinct from the continuum of head movements generated during frank eye-head saccades.
152 of a time series, our results revealed that head-movement generation was more regular in vestibular-
155 Although driven by internal estimates of head movements, head direction cells must be kept aligne
157 tion of HTR based on the dynamics of mouse's head movement, here we present a system for the identifi
162 e (caused by the tumor or neurectomy) alters head movements in a manner that is not normalized by cen
163 more stereotyped behavior such as biting or head movements in D2L-/- mice (which express only D2S) t
165 y of firing dynamics observed in response to head movements in intact animals reflects intrinsic as w
166 e also show that the complicated patterns of head movements in patients with cervical dystonia can be
170 , in opposing directions, when subjects made head movements in the opposite direction to target movem
171 e, we studied the encoding of self-generated head movements in the rat caudal cerebellar vermis, an a
175 gaze-evoked eye nystagmus was identified for head movements; in which the head could not be held stea
177 In hair cells of the inner ear, sound or head movement increases tension in fine filaments termed
178 onal stimuli with optokinetic nystagmus-like head movements, independent of their locomotor state.
179 ntrol head and body movements and how active head movements influence downstream motor control remain
180 ely on accurate encoding and transmission of head movement information to stabilize the head in space
184 chanical forces arising from sound waves and head movement into electrochemical signals to provide ou
187 een vestibular symptoms, such as vertigo and head-movement intolerance, and migraine symptoms, such a
188 gravity-driven responses are cancelled when head movement is a consequence of voluntary generated mo
190 re we investigated whether the patterning of head movements is altered in vestibular-loss patients by
191 s light-dependent switch in how V1 processes head movements is controlled by somatostatin-expressing
193 However, due to its relative resistance to head movements, it is promising for studies investigatin
195 ate inner ear, the ability to detect angular head movements lies in the three semicircular canals and
200 rtraining, similar to our previous report of head movement neurons during acquired, skilled, instrume
201 c magnetic field strength, requiring neither head movement nor dynamic change in magnetic field stren
202 t that these components, sound and patterned head movement, occur together in a highly integrated fas
203 coil technique, we measured eye, eyelid, and head movements of 10 patients who developed selective pa
205 luence of sound source distance and speed of head movement on auditory cortical activity and spatial
208 sonar beam control is generally achieved by head movements or shape changes of the sound-emitting mo
212 rvations suggest that the drive for residual head movements originates downstream of the point in whi
213 pike signals were examined during sinusoidal head movement paired with visual image movement at stimu
214 ding-related parameters, as well as eye- and head-movement parameters, were adversely affected by the
215 s designs was investigated regarding eye and head movement patterns and compared with movement patter
216 be done using only the magnitudes of eye and head movements, potentially removing the need for calibr
218 xhibited distinctive responses during active head movements produced during and after gaze saccades.
219 talk, their changing facial expressions and head movements provide dynamic cues for recognition.
221 d a higher degree of eye movement and higher head movement rate likely because a smaller retinal area
222 We characterized retinal configuration, head movement rate, and degree of eye movement of 29 bir
223 an rely on internal expectations about their head movements, rather than vestibular sensations, to se
224 erentation (UVD) underwent binocular eye and head movement recordings with 3-D magnetic search coils.
228 demonstrated 1.5, 2, and 2.5 times stronger head movement, respectively, than did young control subj
230 lar occlusions (n = 2), pain (n = 2), eye or head movement resulting in injury (n = 2), and 1 case ea
231 across 55 ribosome structures shows that 30S head movement results from flexing at two hinge points l
234 ementary motion detector array, we show that head movements shift the effective visual input dynamic
237 rimary visual cortex (V1) receives real-time head movement signals-direction, velocity, and accelerat
238 reflex in tethered flight and quantified how head movements stabilize visual motion and shape wing st
240 ia, which proposed that the abnormalities of head movements stem from a malfunctioning head neural in
242 submovement composition studies from limb to head movements, suggesting that submovement composition
243 two distinct motor programs, locomotion and head movements that are critical for a C. elegans escape
244 form of locomotion and individually distinct head movements that give the eyes a similar series of vi
245 ng flight turns, Drosophila perform a set of head movements that require silencing their gaze-stabili
246 ties, this stabilizing response is evoked by head movements that typically span frequencies from 0 to
249 ne location, with binocular vision and small head movements then, without any further sight of the ta
250 jority of eye movements are compensatory for head movements, thereby serving to stabilize the visual
251 es randomly, but compensates for microscopic head movements, thereby yielding highly correlated movem
252 rson 3D flying game (Eagle Flight) requiring head movement to control flight direction (pitch, yaw, a
253 chanical forces arising from sound waves and head movement to provide our senses of hearing and balan
254 atency, hypometric amplitude, and the use of head movements to initiate gaze shifts), impaired fixati
255 d, in contrast to rats that use low-velocity head movements to scan the environment as they locomote.
257 umans who use eye movements (with or without head movement) to rapidly shift gaze but in mice relies
260 g the task (i.e., they increased approaching head movements toward the space of the sound) more than
262 euronal activity; in ambient light, the same head movements trigger excitation across all cortical la
263 scharged at a significantly slower rate than head-movement units during both quiet rest and periods o
272 t, during eye-head combined gaze shifts, the head movement was often comprised of overlapping submove
275 g correspondence between intended and actual head movement we revealed a fourfold increase in the wei
276 for mapping brain activation patterns during head movements, we conducted fMRI scans during isometric
277 Vestibular signals related to the passive head movement were faithfully encoded by vestibular nucl
278 Preoperative disability and restriction of head movement were negatively correlated and the initial
279 ects on striatal neurons related to vertical head movement were studied during a task requiring verti
283 ecorded by a head-mounted eye tracker, while head movements were monitored by a motion capture system
285 ertical eye and head movements and torsional head movements were not as discriminatory as were their
290 the trajectories could be very different and head movements were significantly more variable than gaz
291 aturalistic, and multimodal dataset of eye + head movements when subjects performed everyday tasks wh
292 occurs concurrently with quantum dot-labeled head movement, whereas the other occurs with movement of
293 ight maneuvers, insects exhibit compensatory head movements which are essential for stabilizing the v
294 ntral tegmental area in the orchestration of head movements, which might be instrumental in guiding a
295 nts lacked behavioral responses to sound and head movements, while further assays demonstrated no obs
296 in vestibular reflexes respond to identical head movements with a wide range of firing responses.
297 Transient head impacts, however, can elicit head movements with frequency content up to 300-400 Hz,
298 Ronan's contemporary ability to synchronize head movements with novel metronomic sounds presented at
300 detect or discriminate small differences in head movement, with little noise added during downstream