Influence of panoramic cues during prolonged roll-tilt adaptation on the percept of vertical.

IF 2.9 3区 医学 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES
A Pomante, L P J Selen, F Romano, C J Bockisch, A A Tarnutzer, G Bertolini, W P Medendorp
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The percept of vertical, which mainly relies on vestibular and visual cues, is known to be affected after sustained whole-body roll tilt, mostly at roll positions adjacent to the position of adaptation. Here we ask whether the viewing of panoramic visual cues during the adaptation further influences the percept of the visual vertical. Participants were rotated in the frontal plane to a 90° clockwise tilt position, which was maintained for 4-minutes. During this period, the subject was either kept in darkness, or viewed panoramic pictures that were either veridical (aligned with gravity) or oriented along the body longitudinal axis. Errors of the subsequent subjective visual vertical (SVV), measured at various tilt angles, showed that the adaptation effect of panoramic cues is local, i.e. for a narrow range of tilts in the direction of the adaptation angle. This distortion was found irrespective of the orientation of the panoramic cues. We conclude that sustained exposure to panoramic and vestibular cues does not adapt the subsequent percept of vertical to the direction of the panoramic cue. Rather, our results suggest that sustained panoramic cues affect the SVV by an indirect effect on head orientation, with a 90° periodicity, that interacts with a vestibular cue to determine the percept of vertical.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

长时间滚倾适应过程中全景线索对垂直知觉的影响。
垂直感知主要依赖于前庭和视觉线索,已知在持续的全身滚动倾斜后会受到影响,主要是在与适应位置相邻的滚动位置。在此,我们探讨在适应过程中观看全景视觉线索是否会进一步影响视觉垂直感知。受试者在额平面顺时针倾斜90°,保持4分钟。在此期间,受试者要么处于黑暗中,要么观看垂直(与重力对齐)或沿身体纵轴方向的全景图片。不同倾斜角度下的主观视觉垂直度(SVV)误差表明,全景线索的自适应效应是局部的,即在自适应角度方向上的倾斜范围很窄。这种扭曲与全景线索的方向无关。我们的结论是,持续暴露于全景和前庭线索并不能使随后的垂直感知适应全景线索的方向。相反,我们的研究结果表明,持续的全景线索通过对头部方向的间接影响影响SVV,具有90°的周期性,与前庭线索相互作用,以确定垂直的感知。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
4.30%
发文量
66
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Vestibular Research is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes experimental and observational studies, review papers, and theoretical papers based on current knowledge of the vestibular system. Subjects of the studies can include experimental animals, normal humans, and humans with vestibular or other related disorders. Study topics can include the following: Anatomy of the vestibular system, including vestibulo-ocular, vestibulo-spinal, and vestibulo-autonomic pathways Balance disorders Neurochemistry and neuropharmacology of balance, both at the systems and single neuron level Neurophysiology of balance, including the vestibular, ocular motor, autonomic, and postural control systems Psychophysics of spatial orientation Space and motion sickness Vestibular rehabilitation Vestibular-related human performance in various environments
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