Vestibular syndromes in roll plane: graviceptive pathways from otoliths and vertical semicircular canals (SCCs) mediating vestibular function in roll plane. The projections from the otoliths and the vertical semicircular canals to the ocular motor nuclei (trochlear nucleus IV, oculomotor nucleus III, abducens nucleus VI), the supranuclear centers of the interstitial nucleus of Cajal (INC), and the rostral interstitial nucleus of the medial longitudinal fasciculus (riMLF) are shown. They subserve the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) in three planes. The VOR is part of a more complex vestibular reaction that also involves vestibulospinal connections via the medial and lateral vestibulospinal tracts for head and body posture control. Furthermore, connections to the assumed vestibular cortex (areas 2v and 3a and the parietoinsular vestibular cortex [PIVC]) via the vestibular nuclei of the thalamus (Vim, Vce) are depicted. “Graviceptive” vestibular pathways for the roll plane cross at the pontine level. Ocular tilt reaction (OTR) (skew torsion, head tilt, and tilt of perceived vertical, subjective visual vertical [SVV]) is depicted schematically on the right in relation to the level of the lesion: ipsiversive OTR with peripheral and pontomedullary lesions; contraversive OTR with pontomesencephalic lesions. In vestibular thalamic lesions, the tilts of SVV may be contraversive or ipsiversive; in vestibular cortex lesions, they are preferably contraversive. OTR is not induced by supratentorial lesions above the level of INC.3 Source: Vestibular Lesions of the Central Vestibular Pathways, Vestibular Rehabilitation Citation: Herdman SJ, Clendaniel RA. Vestibular Rehabilitation; 2014 Available at: http://fadavispt.mhmedical.com/DownloadImage.aspx?image=/data/books/1878/herdvest_fig-5-03.png&sec=140995667&BookID=1878&ChapterSecID=140995642&imagename= Accessed: November 09, 2017 Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved