Elegant sensory structures in the inner ear have evolved to measure head motion. These vestibular receptors consist of highly conserved semicircular canals and otolith organs. Unlike other senses, vestibular information in the central nervous system becomes immediately multisensory and multimodal. There is no overt, readily recognizable conscious sensation from these organs, yet vestibular signals contribute to a surprising range of brain functions, from the most automatic reflexes to spatial perception and motor coordination. Critical to these diverse, multimodal functions are multiple computationally intriguing levels of processing. For example, the need for multisensory integration necessitates vestibular representations in multiple refe...
SummaryThe vestibular organs in the inner ear are commonly thought of as sensors that serve balance,...
This review focuses on recent approaches to unravel the capacity of otolith-related brainstem neuron...
The vestibular system is vital for our sense of linear self-motion. At the earliest processing stage...
Six independent co-ordinates comprising three rotational and three translational degrees of freedom ...
THESIS 10308In humans, the percept of motion is a combination ol multiple sensors modalities, primar...
The current final report covers the period from June 1, 1999 to May 31, 2002. The primary objective ...
Humans are capable of moving about the world in complex ways. Every time we move, our self-motion mu...
Contains fulltext : 178526.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)The vestibular ...
Humans are capable of moving about the world in complex ways. Every time we move, our self-motion mu...
The vestibular system is critical for postural balance, orientation, reflexive control of eye moveme...
Detection of the state of self-motion, such as the instantaneous heading direction, the traveled tra...
No unimodal vestibular cortex has been identified in the human brain. Rather, vestibular inputs are ...
The vestibular system includes different anatomical structures and physiological pathways. In the fi...
AbstractThe vestibular system processes information about head movement and orientation. No unimodal...
The vestibular system is vital for maintaining an accurate representation of self-motion. As one mov...
SummaryThe vestibular organs in the inner ear are commonly thought of as sensors that serve balance,...
This review focuses on recent approaches to unravel the capacity of otolith-related brainstem neuron...
The vestibular system is vital for our sense of linear self-motion. At the earliest processing stage...
Six independent co-ordinates comprising three rotational and three translational degrees of freedom ...
THESIS 10308In humans, the percept of motion is a combination ol multiple sensors modalities, primar...
The current final report covers the period from June 1, 1999 to May 31, 2002. The primary objective ...
Humans are capable of moving about the world in complex ways. Every time we move, our self-motion mu...
Contains fulltext : 178526.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)The vestibular ...
Humans are capable of moving about the world in complex ways. Every time we move, our self-motion mu...
The vestibular system is critical for postural balance, orientation, reflexive control of eye moveme...
Detection of the state of self-motion, such as the instantaneous heading direction, the traveled tra...
No unimodal vestibular cortex has been identified in the human brain. Rather, vestibular inputs are ...
The vestibular system includes different anatomical structures and physiological pathways. In the fi...
AbstractThe vestibular system processes information about head movement and orientation. No unimodal...
The vestibular system is vital for maintaining an accurate representation of self-motion. As one mov...
SummaryThe vestibular organs in the inner ear are commonly thought of as sensors that serve balance,...
This review focuses on recent approaches to unravel the capacity of otolith-related brainstem neuron...
The vestibular system is vital for our sense of linear self-motion. At the earliest processing stage...