To successfully perform daily activities such as maintaining posture or running, humans need to be sensitive to self-motion over a large range of motion intensities. Recent studies have shown that the human ability to discriminate self-motion in the presence of either inertial-only motion cues or visual-only motion cues is not constant but rather decreases with motion intensity. However, these results do not yet allow for a quantitative description of how self-motion is discriminated in the presence of combined visual and inertial cues, since little is known about visual–inertial perceptual integration and the resulting self-motion perception over a wide range of motion intensity. Here we investigate these two questions for head-centred yaw...
Numerous studies report that humans integrate multisensory information in a statistically optimal fa...
Understanding the dynamics of vestibular perception is important, for example, for improving the rea...
Vision contributes to balance, and vision is thought to dominate vestibular (or inertial) informatio...
To successfully perform daily activities such as maintaining posture or running, humans need to be s...
While moving through the environment, humans use vision to discriminate different self-motion intens...
While moving through the environment, our central nervous system accumulates sensory information ove...
Whilst moving through the environment humans use vision to discriminate different self-motion intens...
Sensory information processes leading to human self-motion perception have been modelled in the past...
Do humans integrate visual and vestibular information in a statistically optimal fashion when discri...
Do humans integrate visual and vestibular information in a statistically optimal fashion when discri...
This study investigated human sensitivity to detect conflicts between visual and vestibular informat...
The brain is able to determine angular self-motion from visual, vestibular, and kinesthetic informat...
© The Author(s) 2015. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com previously publ...
The perception of one’s own motion through the environment is based on the integration of different ...
Self-motion perception and vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) were studied during whole body yaw rotation...
Numerous studies report that humans integrate multisensory information in a statistically optimal fa...
Understanding the dynamics of vestibular perception is important, for example, for improving the rea...
Vision contributes to balance, and vision is thought to dominate vestibular (or inertial) informatio...
To successfully perform daily activities such as maintaining posture or running, humans need to be s...
While moving through the environment, humans use vision to discriminate different self-motion intens...
While moving through the environment, our central nervous system accumulates sensory information ove...
Whilst moving through the environment humans use vision to discriminate different self-motion intens...
Sensory information processes leading to human self-motion perception have been modelled in the past...
Do humans integrate visual and vestibular information in a statistically optimal fashion when discri...
Do humans integrate visual and vestibular information in a statistically optimal fashion when discri...
This study investigated human sensitivity to detect conflicts between visual and vestibular informat...
The brain is able to determine angular self-motion from visual, vestibular, and kinesthetic informat...
© The Author(s) 2015. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com previously publ...
The perception of one’s own motion through the environment is based on the integration of different ...
Self-motion perception and vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) were studied during whole body yaw rotation...
Numerous studies report that humans integrate multisensory information in a statistically optimal fa...
Understanding the dynamics of vestibular perception is important, for example, for improving the rea...
Vision contributes to balance, and vision is thought to dominate vestibular (or inertial) informatio...