Visuo-vestibular Contributions to Vertical Self-motion Perception in Healthy Adults

被引:0
作者
Giannopulu, I. [1 ]
Leboucher, P. [1 ]
Rautureau, G. [1 ]
Israel, I. [1 ]
Jouvent, R. [1 ]
机构
[1] UPMC, IHU A Brain & Spine Inst ICM, Virtual Reality Prism Platform, CNRS U7225,Grp Hosp Pitie Saletriere, Paris, France
来源
NEW TRENDS IN MEDICAL AND SERVICE ROBOTS: HUMAN CENTERED ANALYSIS, CONTROL AND DESIGN | 2016年 / 39卷
关键词
Visuo-vestibular interaction; Vertical self-motion; Cardiovascular activity; Adults; HMD; VESTIBULAR CORTEX; BRAIN; ROTATION; TILT; CIRCULARVECTION; HUMANS; AXES;
D O I
10.1007/978-3-319-30674-2_8
中图分类号
TP24 [机器人技术];
学科分类号
080202 ; 1405 ;
摘要
The intensity of the visuo-vestibular interaction, i.e., visuo-vestibular conflict, would influence upward self-motion and downward self-motion latencies and cardiovascular activity. In order to test this hypothesis, thirty five healthy adults aged 22 years in average have been immersed to a central visual motion via a HMD. During upward and downward self-motion perception, the engagement of vestibular saccular organs seems to contribute differently to latencies and cardiovascular activation depending on the direction of gravitational acceleration. Downward self-motion latencies (same direction acceleration) are shorter than upward self-motion latencies (opposite direction acceleration). In the same vein, cardiovascular autonomic activation, reflecting by heart rate, is lower for downward self-motion than for upward self-motion. Our results provide evidence that visuo-vestibular interaction would contribute to influence both latencies and cardiovascular variation in vertical self-motion perception.
引用
收藏
页码:101 / 112
页数:12
相关论文
共 42 条
  • [41] Integration of visual and haptic informations in the perception of the vertical in young and old healthy adults and right brain-damaged patients
    Braem, B.
    Honore, J.
    Rousseaux, M.
    Saj, A.
    Coello, Y.
    NEUROPHYSIOLOGIE CLINIQUE-CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2014, 44 (01): : 41 - 48
  • [42] Individual factors and vection in younger and older adults: How sex, field dependence, personality, and visual attention do (or do not) affect illusory self-motion
    Murovec, Brandy
    Spaniol, Julia
    Keshavarz, Behrang
    I-PERCEPTION, 2024, 15 (04):