University of Wollongong
Browse

Simulated angular head oscillation enhances vection in depth

Download (507.53 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-14, 21:21 authored by Juno Kim, Stephen PalmisanoStephen Palmisano, Frederick Bonato
Research has shown that adding simulated linear head oscillation to radial optic flow displays enhances the illusion of self-motion in depth (ie linear vection). We examined whether this oscillation advantage for vection was due to either the added motion parallax or retinal slip generated by insufficient compensatory eye movement during display oscillation. We constructed radial flow displays which simulated 1 Hz horizontal linear head oscillation (generates motion parallax) or angular head oscillation in yaw (generates no motion parallax).We found that adding simulated angular or linear head oscillation to radial flow increased the strength of linear vection in depth. Neither type of simulated head oscillation significantly reduced vection onset latencies relative to pure radial flow. Simultaneous eye-movement recordings showed that slow-phase ocular following responses (OFRs) were induced in both linear and angular viewpoint oscillation conditions. Vection strength was significantly reduced by active central fixation when viewing displays which simulated angular, but not linear, head oscillation. When these displays with angular oscillation were viewed without stable fixation, vection strength was found to increase with the velocity and regularity of the OFR.We conclude that vection improvements observed during central viewing of displays with angular viewpoint oscillation depend on the generation of eye movements.

History

Citation

Kim, J., Palmisano, S. Bonato, F. (2012). Simulated angular head oscillation enhances vection in depth. Perception, 41 (4), 402-414.

Journal title

Perception

Volume

41

Issue

4

Pagination

402-414

Publisher website/DOI

Language

English

RIS ID

59072

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC