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Integration of visual and inertial cues in the perception of angular self-motion

Authors
de Winkel, K. N.Soyka, F.Barnett-Cowan, M.Buelthoff, H. H.Groen, E. L.Werkhoven, P. J.
Issue Date
Nov-2013
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Inertial; Vestibular; Visual; Self-motion; Maximum likelihood; Multisensory integration
Citation
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, v.231, no.2, pp.209 - 218
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume
231
Number
2
Start Page
209
End Page
218
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/101741
DOI
10.1007/s00221-013-3683-1
ISSN
0014-4819
Abstract
The brain is able to determine angular self-motion from visual, vestibular, and kinesthetic information. There is compelling evidence that both humans and non-human primates integrate visual and inertial (i.e., vestibular and kinesthetic) information in a statistically optimal fashion when discriminating heading direction. In the present study, we investigated whether the brain also integrates information about angular self-motion in a similar manner. Eight participants performed a 2IFC task in which they discriminated yaw-rotations (2-s sinusoidal acceleration) on peak velocity. Just-noticeable differences (JNDs) were determined as a measure of precision in unimodal inertial-only and visual-only trials, as well as in bimodal visual-inertial trials. The visual stimulus was a moving stripe pattern, synchronized with the inertial motion. Peak velocity of comparison stimuli was varied relative to the standard stimulus. Individual analyses showed that data of three participants showed an increase in bimodal precision, consistent with the optimal integration model; while data from the other participants did not conform to maximum-likelihood integration schemes. We suggest that either the sensory cues were not perceived as congruent, that integration might be achieved with fixed weights, or that estimates of visual precision obtained from non-moving observers do not accurately reflect visual precision during self-motion.
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