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Pupil responses associated with the perception of gravitational vertical under directional optic flows

Authors
Park, Joo HyunCho, Sung IkChoi, JuneHan, JungHyunRah, Yoon Chan
Issue Date
29-Oct-2021
Publisher
NATURE PORTFOLIO
Citation
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, v.11, no.1
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume
11
Number
1
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/135997
DOI
10.1038/s41598-021-00346-y
ISSN
2045-2322
Abstract
This study assessed the pupil responses in the sensory integration of various directional optic flows during the perception of gravitational vertical. A total of 30 healthy participants were enrolled with normal responses to conventional subjective visual vertical (SVV) which was determined by measuring the difference (error angles) between the luminous line adjusted by the participants and the true vertical. SVV was performed under various types of rotational (5 degrees/s, 10 degrees/s, and 50 degrees/s) and straight (5 degrees/s and 10 degrees/s) optic flows presented via a head-mounted display. Error angles (degrees) of the SVV and changes in pupil diameters (mm) were measured to evaluate the changes in the visually assessed subjective verticality and related cognitive demands. Significantly larger error angles were measured under rotational optic flows than under straight flows (p < 0.001). The error angles also significantly increased as the velocity of the rotational optic flow increased. The pupil diameter increased after starting the test, demonstrating the largest diameter during the final fine-tuning around the vertical. Significantly larger pupil changes were identified under rotational flows than in straight flows. Pupil changes were significantly correlated with error angles and the visual analog scale representing subjective difficulties during each test. These results suggest increased pupil changes for integrating more challenging visual sensory inputs in the process of gravity perception.
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