INTRO Females are influenced more than males by visual cues during many spatial orientation tasks; but females rely more heavily on gravitational cues during visual-vestibular conflict. Are there gender biases in the relative contributions of vision, gravity and the internal representation of the body to the perception of upright? And might any such biases be affected by low gravity? METHODS 16 participants (8 female) viewed a highly polarized visual scene tilted ±112° while lying supine on the European Space Agency’s short-arm human centrifuge. The centrifuge was rotated to simulate 24 logarithmically spaced g-levels along the long axis of the body (0.04-0.5g at ear-level). The perception of upright was measured using the Oriented Chara...
Background: Vision, vestibular sense, proprioception and muscle strength are required to maintain ba...
The human visual system has evolved to be highly sensitive to visual information about other persons...
Physical inversion of whole or partial human body representations typically has catastrophic consequ...
Females are influenced more than males by visual cues during many spatial orientation tasks; but fem...
Females have been reported to be more ‘visually dependent’ than males. When aligning a rod in a tilt...
Previous reports suggest differences between males and females when performing spatial perception ta...
Abstract Background Sex differences exist for many sp...
International audienceBACKGROUND: The subjective visual vertical (SVV, the visual estimation of grav...
Abstract Background The subjective visual vertical (SVV, the visual estimation of gravitational dire...
Maintaining orientation in an environment with non-Earth gravity (1 g) is critical for an astronaut'...
Our brain receives a series of sensory snapshots of the external world, which it must integrate to p...
Scientific literature highlighted gender differences in spatial orientation. In particular, men and ...
Background: Vision, vestibular sense, proprioception and muscle strength are required to maintain ba...
The human visual system has evolved to be highly sensitive to visual information about other persons...
Physical inversion of whole or partial human body representations typically has catastrophic consequ...
Females are influenced more than males by visual cues during many spatial orientation tasks; but fem...
Females have been reported to be more ‘visually dependent’ than males. When aligning a rod in a tilt...
Previous reports suggest differences between males and females when performing spatial perception ta...
Abstract Background Sex differences exist for many sp...
International audienceBACKGROUND: The subjective visual vertical (SVV, the visual estimation of grav...
Abstract Background The subjective visual vertical (SVV, the visual estimation of gravitational dire...
Maintaining orientation in an environment with non-Earth gravity (1 g) is critical for an astronaut'...
Our brain receives a series of sensory snapshots of the external world, which it must integrate to p...
Scientific literature highlighted gender differences in spatial orientation. In particular, men and ...
Background: Vision, vestibular sense, proprioception and muscle strength are required to maintain ba...
The human visual system has evolved to be highly sensitive to visual information about other persons...
Physical inversion of whole or partial human body representations typically has catastrophic consequ...