نتایج جستجو برای: otolith

تعداد نتایج: 1855  

Journal: :Journal of fish biology 2014
S L Bourret B P Kennedy C C Caudill P M Chittaro

Isotopic composition of (87) Sr:(86) Sr and natural elemental tracers (Sr, Ba, Mg, Mn and Ca) were quantified from otoliths in juvenile and adult Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha to assess the ability of otolith microchemistry and microstructure to reconstruct juvenile O. tshawytscha rearing habitat and growth. Daily increments were measured to assess relative growth between natal rearin...

2011
Ronan Fablet Laure Pecquerie Hélène de Pontual Hans Høie Richard Millner Henrik Mosegaard Sebastiaan A. L. M. Kooijman

Otoliths are biocalcified bodies connected to the sensory system in the inner ears of fish. Their layered, biorhythm-following formation provides individual records of the age, the individual history and the natural environment of extinct and living fish species. Such data are critical for ecosystem and fisheries monitoring. They however often lack validation and the poor understanding of biomi...

Journal: :Journal of fish biology 2016
J Y Wong C Chu V C Chong S K Dhillon K H Loh

Combined multiple 2D views (proximal, anterior and ventral aspects) of the sagittal otolith are proposed here as a method to capture shape information for fish classification. Classification performance of single view compared with combined 2D views show improved classification accuracy of the latter, for nine species of Sciaenidae. The effects of shape description methods (shape indices, Procr...

Journal: :Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry 1983
G M Halmagyi M A Gresty

Conventional neuro-otological tests measure only semi-circular canal function and not otolith function. A clinically acceptable test of otolith function was developed. Previous studies suggested that muscle responses which occur less than 100 ms after release into free-fall are part of a startle reflex originating in the otoliths. With a couch capable of producing sudden, safe, comfortable free...

Journal: :Journal of vestibular research : equilibrium & orientation 1998
R H Schor B C Steinbacher B J Yates

Responses to linear accelerations in the earth-horizontal plane (typically provoked by tilts of the head or body) are characterized by a stimulus direction that produces the maximal excitation. Although changes in cardiovascular, sympathetic, and respiratory outflow are maximized during pitch, no collection of central vestibular neurons had been identified where pitch responses predominate. In ...

1999
BERNHARD J. M. HESS DORA E. ANGELAKI

Hess, Bernhard J. M. and Dora E. Angelaki. Oculomotor control tion of Listing’s plane is the state of ocular vergence (Mok of primary eye position discriminates between translation and tilt. et al. 1992). J. Neurophysiol. 81: 394–398, 1999. We have previously shown When the head dynamically rotates in space, for example, that fast phase axis orientation and primary eye position in rhesus during...

Journal: :Archives of otolaryngology--head & neck surgery 1999
S R Wiener-Vacher L Amanou P Denise P Narcy Y Manach

BACKGROUND Histopathological examinations and computed tomographic scans of the temporal bone in patients with the CHARGE association (a malformative syndrome that includes coloboma, heart disease, choanal atresia, retarded development, genital hypoplasia, and ear anomalies, including hypoplasia of the external ear and hearing loss) have shown an absence of semicircular canals and a Mondini for...

2015
P. G. Coulson B. A. Black I. C. Potter N. G. Hall

Chronologies are developed from the otolith growth-increment widths of adult rock flathead (Platycephalus laevigatus) and longhead flathead (Leviprora inops) collected from three inter-connected embayments in temperate south-western Australia. Marginal increment trends on otoliths, in combination with the dendrochronological technique of crossdating, provide strong evidence that an opaque zone ...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 2008
Kimberly L McArthur J David Dickman

Gaze-stabilizing eye and head responses compensate more effectively for low-frequency rotational motion when such motion stimulates the otolith organs, as during earth-horizontal axis rotations. However, the nature of the otolith signal responsible for this improvement in performance has not been previously determined. In this study, we used combinations of earth-horizontal axis rotational and ...

2012
Shigehito Tanahashi Hiroyasu Ujike Kazuhiko Ukai

The visual-vestibular conflict theory asserts that visual-vestibular conflicts reduce vection and that vection strength is reduced with an increasing discrepancy between actual and expected vestibular activity. Most studies support this theory, although researchers have not always accepted them. To ascertain the conditions under which the theory of the visual-vestibular conflict can be applied,...

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