Effects of superior colliculus ablation on the air-righting reflex in the rat

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Abstract

To examine how the superior colliculus, the motor center of orientation and avoidance, could interact with postural reflexes, we investigated effects of unilateral and bilateral ablations on air-righting reflex movements in otherwise intact rats. Superior colliculus ablations variously modified righting movements: After falling from the supine position, the rats sometimes showed dorsiflexion instead of normal ventriflexion; the motor sequence of rotation from the fore- to the hindquarter was often modified to simultaneous rotation; lateral turn from supine to prone position was occasionally insufficient; body direction that was normally kept constant during falling was often changed; final posture sometimes deviated from the horizontal position. The first three abnormalities occurred almost twice in frequency as lesions increased from unilateral to bilateral ablation, and in unilaterally ablated rats, did so in righting contraversive to the lesions. Multiple influences of tectoreticular input to the air-righting reflex center are discussed. © 2009 The Physiological Society of Japan and Springer.

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Yan, X., Okito, K., & Yamaguchi, T. (2010). Effects of superior colliculus ablation on the air-righting reflex in the rat. Journal of Physiological Sciences, 60(2), 129–136. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12576-009-0076-0

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