We tested the hypothesis that the brain uses a variance-based weighting of multisensory cues to estimate head rotation to perceive which way is up. The hypothesis predicts that the known bias in perceived vertical, which occurs when the visual environment is rotated in a vertical-plane, will be reduced by the addition of visual noise. Ten healthy participants sat head-fixed in front of a vertical screen presenting an annulus filled with coloured dots, which could rotate clockwise or counter-clockwise at six angular velocities (1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 16°/s) and with six levels of noise (0, 25, 50, 60, 75, 80%). Participants were required to keep a central bar vertical by rotating a hand-held dial. Continuous adjustments of the bar were required to c...
Gravity provides an absolute verticality reference for all spatial perception, allowing us to move w...
This thesis describes the results of a research project that focused on how visual and vestibular si...
The brain constructs an internal estimate of the gravitational vertical by integrating multiple sens...
We tested the hypothesis that the brain uses a variance-based weighting of multisensory cues to esti...
Inferring object orientation in the surroundings heavily depends on our internal sense of direction ...
It has been proposed that the perception of 'up' is constructed by the brain as a vector sum; combin...
The vestibular system provides information for spatial orientation. However, this information is amb...
Inferring object orientation in the surroundings heavily depends on our internal sense of direction ...
Percepts of verticality are thought to be constructed as a weighted average of multisensory inputs, ...
Contains fulltext : 55951.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)During prolong...
Item does not contain fulltextTo assess the effects of degrading canal cues for dynamic spatial orie...
Contains fulltext : 36683.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)During prolong...
The perception of gravitational vertical is determined by estimates from visual, vestibular and prop...
To assess the effects of degrading canal cues for dynamic spatial orientation in human observers, we...
As a prominent illusion. the motion aftereffect (MAE) has traditionally been considered a visual phe...
Gravity provides an absolute verticality reference for all spatial perception, allowing us to move w...
This thesis describes the results of a research project that focused on how visual and vestibular si...
The brain constructs an internal estimate of the gravitational vertical by integrating multiple sens...
We tested the hypothesis that the brain uses a variance-based weighting of multisensory cues to esti...
Inferring object orientation in the surroundings heavily depends on our internal sense of direction ...
It has been proposed that the perception of 'up' is constructed by the brain as a vector sum; combin...
The vestibular system provides information for spatial orientation. However, this information is amb...
Inferring object orientation in the surroundings heavily depends on our internal sense of direction ...
Percepts of verticality are thought to be constructed as a weighted average of multisensory inputs, ...
Contains fulltext : 55951.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)During prolong...
Item does not contain fulltextTo assess the effects of degrading canal cues for dynamic spatial orie...
Contains fulltext : 36683.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)During prolong...
The perception of gravitational vertical is determined by estimates from visual, vestibular and prop...
To assess the effects of degrading canal cues for dynamic spatial orientation in human observers, we...
As a prominent illusion. the motion aftereffect (MAE) has traditionally been considered a visual phe...
Gravity provides an absolute verticality reference for all spatial perception, allowing us to move w...
This thesis describes the results of a research project that focused on how visual and vestibular si...
The brain constructs an internal estimate of the gravitational vertical by integrating multiple sens...