Swung and spun in weightlessness : Evidence of immediate canalar underdetection of rotations in parabolic flight
Bonnard, T.; Doat, E.; Guehl, D.; Guillaud, E.
Show abstract
Despite extensive research on vestibular function in microgravity, particularly during orbital and parabolic flight exposure, several gaps remain regarding the spontaneous behavior of vestibular organs under non-terrestrial gravitoinertial conditions. In particular, semicircular canal function, typically assessed through vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) recordings, has yielded inconsistent findings, with reports describing either no effect or reduced performance in microgravity. Moreover, many of these studies are limited by methodological constraints that reduce the interpretability of their conclusions. To clarify these discrepancies, we evaluated horizontal and vertical VOR responses during parabolic flights to assess semicircular canal function under transient weightlessness. Participants were passively rotated at a constant frequency and amplitude during normogravity and microgravity phases, centered along the head vertical or inter-aural axis. Eye movements were recorded binocularly using infrared eye-tracking in darkness to eliminate visual influences, while participants were tightly restrained to minimize proprioceptive variability. Results show a reduction in VOR gain during microgravity in both axes, despite consistent rotational stimulation across gravity conditions. In addition, VOR gain remained reduced after parabolas in the horizontal plane, whereas vertical VOR performance was preserved. These are the first results to demonstrate an immediate alteration of semicircular canal function in weightlessness. Possible sources of the reduction in VOR performance in 0g are discussed. We also propose that the observed post-flight effects reflect a down-weighting of semicircular canal inputs during multisensory integration.
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