It has long been known that sound fields rotating around a stationary, blindfolded observer can elicit self-motion illusions ("circular vection") in 20--60 of participants. Here, we investigated whether auditory circular vection might depend on whether participants sense and know that actual motion is possible or impossible. Although participants in auditory vection studies are often seated on moveable seats to suspend the disbelief of self-motion, it has never been investigated whether this does, in fact, facilitate vection. To this end, participants were seated on a hammock chair with their feet either on solid ground ("movement impossible" condition) or suspended ("movement possible" condition) while listening to individualized binaural ...
Despite recent technological advances, convincing self-motion simulation in Virtual Reality (VR) is ...
We investigated whether the visually induced perception of illusory self-motion (vection) can be inf...
Sounds are thought to contribute to the perceptions of self-motion, often via higher-level, cognitiv...
It has long been known that sound fields rotating around a stationary, blindfolded observer can elic...
Sound fields rotating around stationary blindfolded listeners sometimes elicit auditory circular vec...
Sound fields rotating around stationary blindfolded listeners sometimes elicit auditory circular vec...
It is well known that a moving visual stimulus covering a large part of the visual field can induce ...
There is a long tradition of investigating the self-motion illusion induced by rotating visual stimu...
While rotating visual and auditory stimuli have long been known to elicit self-motion illusions ("ci...
While rotating visual and auditory stimuli have long been known to elicit self-motion illusions (ci...
Although moving auditory cues have long been known to induce self-motion illusions (“circular vectio...
This study investigated whether the visually induced self-motion illusion (“circular vection”) can b...
This thesis is concerned with the sense of self motion and orientation and how auditory cues from th...
This study investigated whether the visually induced selfmotion illusion (circular vection) can be...
“Circular vection” refers to the illusion of self-motion induced by rotating visual or auditory stim...
Despite recent technological advances, convincing self-motion simulation in Virtual Reality (VR) is ...
We investigated whether the visually induced perception of illusory self-motion (vection) can be inf...
Sounds are thought to contribute to the perceptions of self-motion, often via higher-level, cognitiv...
It has long been known that sound fields rotating around a stationary, blindfolded observer can elic...
Sound fields rotating around stationary blindfolded listeners sometimes elicit auditory circular vec...
Sound fields rotating around stationary blindfolded listeners sometimes elicit auditory circular vec...
It is well known that a moving visual stimulus covering a large part of the visual field can induce ...
There is a long tradition of investigating the self-motion illusion induced by rotating visual stimu...
While rotating visual and auditory stimuli have long been known to elicit self-motion illusions ("ci...
While rotating visual and auditory stimuli have long been known to elicit self-motion illusions (ci...
Although moving auditory cues have long been known to induce self-motion illusions (“circular vectio...
This study investigated whether the visually induced self-motion illusion (“circular vection”) can b...
This thesis is concerned with the sense of self motion and orientation and how auditory cues from th...
This study investigated whether the visually induced selfmotion illusion (circular vection) can be...
“Circular vection” refers to the illusion of self-motion induced by rotating visual or auditory stim...
Despite recent technological advances, convincing self-motion simulation in Virtual Reality (VR) is ...
We investigated whether the visually induced perception of illusory self-motion (vection) can be inf...
Sounds are thought to contribute to the perceptions of self-motion, often via higher-level, cognitiv...