<div><p>It has been shown that the Central Nervous System (CNS) integrates visual and inertial information in heading estimation for congruent multisensory stimuli and stimuli with small discrepancies. Multisensory information should, however, only be integrated when the cues are redundant. Here, we investigated how the CNS constructs an estimate of heading for combinations of visual and inertial heading stimuli with a wide range of discrepancies. Participants were presented with 2s visual-only and inertial-only motion stimuli, and combinations thereof. Discrepancies between visual and inertial heading ranging between 0-90° were introduced for the combined stimuli. In the unisensory conditions, it was found that visual heading was generally...
Knowledge of human motion perception can be applied in the optimization of motion cueing algorithms....
Recent work indicates that the central nervous system forms multisensory perceptions differently dep...
Do humans integrate visual and vestibular information in a statistically optimal fashion when discri...
It has been shown that the Central Nervous System (CNS) integrates visual and inertial information i...
A large body of research shows that the Central Nervous System (CNS) integrates multisensory informa...
A large body of research shows that the Central Nervous System (CNS) integrates multisensory informa...
A large body of research shows that the Central Nervous System (CNS) integrates multisensory informa...
It has been shown repeatedly that visual and inertial sensory information on the heading of self-mot...
Heading estimation involves both inertial and visual cues. Inertial motion is sensed by the labyrint...
In the present study, we investigated whether the perception of heading of linear self-motion can be...
The brain is able to determine angular self-motion from visual, vestibular, and kinesthetic informat...
Heading direction is determined from visual and inertial cues. Visual headings use retinal coordinat...
Previous studies of heading perception suggest that human observers employ spatiotemporal pooling to...
Summary: Precise heading perception requires integration of optic flow and vestibular cues, yet the ...
Knowledge of human motion perception can be applied in the optimization of motion cueing algorithms....
Knowledge of human motion perception can be applied in the optimization of motion cueing algorithms....
Recent work indicates that the central nervous system forms multisensory perceptions differently dep...
Do humans integrate visual and vestibular information in a statistically optimal fashion when discri...
It has been shown that the Central Nervous System (CNS) integrates visual and inertial information i...
A large body of research shows that the Central Nervous System (CNS) integrates multisensory informa...
A large body of research shows that the Central Nervous System (CNS) integrates multisensory informa...
A large body of research shows that the Central Nervous System (CNS) integrates multisensory informa...
It has been shown repeatedly that visual and inertial sensory information on the heading of self-mot...
Heading estimation involves both inertial and visual cues. Inertial motion is sensed by the labyrint...
In the present study, we investigated whether the perception of heading of linear self-motion can be...
The brain is able to determine angular self-motion from visual, vestibular, and kinesthetic informat...
Heading direction is determined from visual and inertial cues. Visual headings use retinal coordinat...
Previous studies of heading perception suggest that human observers employ spatiotemporal pooling to...
Summary: Precise heading perception requires integration of optic flow and vestibular cues, yet the ...
Knowledge of human motion perception can be applied in the optimization of motion cueing algorithms....
Knowledge of human motion perception can be applied in the optimization of motion cueing algorithms....
Recent work indicates that the central nervous system forms multisensory perceptions differently dep...
Do humans integrate visual and vestibular information in a statistically optimal fashion when discri...