Humans are capable of moving about the world in complex ways. Every time we move, our self-motion must be detected and interpreted by the central nervous system in order to make appropriate sequential movements and informed decisions. The vestibular labyrinth consists of two unique sensory organs the semi-circular canals and the otoliths that are specialized to detect rotation and translation of the head, respectively. While thresholds for pure rotational and translational self-motion are well understood surprisingly little research has investigated the relative role of each organ on thresholds for more complex motion. Eccentric (off-center) rotations during which the participant faces away from the center of rotation stimulate both organs ...
Do humans integrate visual and vestibular information in a statistically optimal fashion when discri...
Navigation through the environment is a naturally multisensory task involving a coordinated set of s...
The vestibular system is vital for our sense of linear self-motion. At the earliest processing stage...
Humans are capable of moving about the world in complex ways. Every time we move, our self-motion mu...
Humans are capable of moving about the world in complex ways. Every time we move, our self-motion mu...
Humans are capable of moving about the world in complex ways. Every time we move, our self-motion mu...
During eccentric yaw rotations around an Earth-vertical axis the semi-circular canals are stimulated...
Six independent co-ordinates comprising three rotational and three translational degrees of freedom ...
Human spatial orientation relies on vision, somatosensory cues and signals from the semicircular can...
Contains fulltext : 36032.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Using vestibul...
Few studies have investigated the perception of vestibular stimuli when they occur in sequences. Her...
Contains fulltext : 35192.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Human spatial ...
Registration of ego-motion is important to accurately navigate through space. Movements of the head ...
Do humans integrate visual and vestibular information in a statistically optimal fashion when discri...
Reaction times (RTs) to purely inertial self-motion stimuli have only infrequently been studied, and...
Do humans integrate visual and vestibular information in a statistically optimal fashion when discri...
Navigation through the environment is a naturally multisensory task involving a coordinated set of s...
The vestibular system is vital for our sense of linear self-motion. At the earliest processing stage...
Humans are capable of moving about the world in complex ways. Every time we move, our self-motion mu...
Humans are capable of moving about the world in complex ways. Every time we move, our self-motion mu...
Humans are capable of moving about the world in complex ways. Every time we move, our self-motion mu...
During eccentric yaw rotations around an Earth-vertical axis the semi-circular canals are stimulated...
Six independent co-ordinates comprising three rotational and three translational degrees of freedom ...
Human spatial orientation relies on vision, somatosensory cues and signals from the semicircular can...
Contains fulltext : 36032.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Using vestibul...
Few studies have investigated the perception of vestibular stimuli when they occur in sequences. Her...
Contains fulltext : 35192.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Human spatial ...
Registration of ego-motion is important to accurately navigate through space. Movements of the head ...
Do humans integrate visual and vestibular information in a statistically optimal fashion when discri...
Reaction times (RTs) to purely inertial self-motion stimuli have only infrequently been studied, and...
Do humans integrate visual and vestibular information in a statistically optimal fashion when discri...
Navigation through the environment is a naturally multisensory task involving a coordinated set of s...
The vestibular system is vital for our sense of linear self-motion. At the earliest processing stage...