Abstract
Postrotatory nystagmus I and II (PI, PII) were evoked in four normal humans by velocity steps (prior velocity of rotating chair 90°/s). 4 s after the stop the head was actively tilted by the subject 90° forwards, backwards, to the shoulder of the previous direction of rotation —-ipsilaterally. or to the other shoulder—contralaterally. In control trials, the head was kept in the previous erect position. Compared with the control experiments, PI was significantly reduced by all head tilts. Inhibition of PI was strongest with forward and weakest with backward tilts. This difference is explained by the inclination of the utricular base by 30° backward with respect to the horizontal of the skull and by the elastic properti es of the sensory matrix. A smaller amplitude (45°) of head tilt about the roll axis leads to a weaker inhibition (28.5 %) than a 90° tilt, which corresponds to the difference of the sine of the tilt angle and thereby reflects the mechanical force acting on the receptor layer.