Contains fulltext : 177664.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)The vestibular system provides information for spatial orientation. However, this information is ambiguous: because the otoliths sense the gravito-inertial force, they cannot distinguish gravitational and inertial components. As a consequence, prolonged linear acceleration of the head can be interpreted as tilt, referred to as the somatogravic effect. Previous modeling work suggests that the brain disambiguates the otolith signal according to the rules of Bayesian inference, combining noisy canal cues with the a priori assumption that prolonged linear accelerations are unlikely. Within this modeling framework the noise of the vestibular signals affects the ...
Using vestibular sensors to maintain visual stability during changes in head tilt, crucial when pano...
On the basis of models of otolith functioning, one would expect that, during sinusoidal linear self-...
In order to discriminate between translatory and gravitational linear acceleration as well as to loc...
The vestibular system provides information for spatial orientation. However, this information is amb...
Contains fulltext : 51167.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)This thesis desc...
Contains fulltext : 158794.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Inferring obj...
Contains fulltext : 36032.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Using vestibul...
Contains fulltext : 55951.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)During prolong...
This thesis describes the results of a research project to investigate vestibular aspects of visual ...
Contains fulltext : 36683.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)During prolong...
When a man is accelerated on a centrifuge, the direction of gravitoinertial vertical changes relativ...
Periodical stimulation of the otoliths during linear horizontal displacement leads not only to motio...
Inferring object orientation in the surroundings heavily depends on our internal sense of direction ...
Inferring object orientation in the surroundings heavily depends on our internal sense of direction ...
Item does not contain fulltextThe brain is thought to use rotation cues from both the vestibular and...
Using vestibular sensors to maintain visual stability during changes in head tilt, crucial when pano...
On the basis of models of otolith functioning, one would expect that, during sinusoidal linear self-...
In order to discriminate between translatory and gravitational linear acceleration as well as to loc...
The vestibular system provides information for spatial orientation. However, this information is amb...
Contains fulltext : 51167.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)This thesis desc...
Contains fulltext : 158794.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Inferring obj...
Contains fulltext : 36032.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Using vestibul...
Contains fulltext : 55951.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)During prolong...
This thesis describes the results of a research project to investigate vestibular aspects of visual ...
Contains fulltext : 36683.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)During prolong...
When a man is accelerated on a centrifuge, the direction of gravitoinertial vertical changes relativ...
Periodical stimulation of the otoliths during linear horizontal displacement leads not only to motio...
Inferring object orientation in the surroundings heavily depends on our internal sense of direction ...
Inferring object orientation in the surroundings heavily depends on our internal sense of direction ...
Item does not contain fulltextThe brain is thought to use rotation cues from both the vestibular and...
Using vestibular sensors to maintain visual stability during changes in head tilt, crucial when pano...
On the basis of models of otolith functioning, one would expect that, during sinusoidal linear self-...
In order to discriminate between translatory and gravitational linear acceleration as well as to loc...