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Vection during conflicting multisensory information about the axis, magnitude and direction of self-motion

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posted on 2024-11-14, 21:34 authored by April Ash, Stephen PalmisanoStephen Palmisano
We examined the vection induced by consistent and conflicting multisensory information about self-motion. Observers viewed displays simulating constant-velocity self-motion in depth while physically oscillating their heads left ^ right or back ^ forth in time with a metronome. Their tracked head movements were either ignored or incorporated directly into the self-motion display (as an added simulated self-acceleration). When this head oscillation was updated into displays, sensory conflict was generated by simulating oscillation along: (i) an orthogonal axis to the head movement; or (ii) the same axis, but in a non-ecological direction. Simulated head oscillation always produced stronger vection than `no display oscillation'öeven when the axis/direction of this display motion was inconsistent with the physical head motion. When head-and-display oscillation occurred along the same axis: (i) consistent (in-phase) horizontal display oscillation produced stronger vection than conflicting (out-of-phase) horizontal display oscillation; however, (ii) consistent and conflicting depth oscillation conditions did not induce significantly different vection. Overall, orthogonal-axis oscillation was found to produce very similar vection to same-axis oscillation. Thus, we conclude that while vection appears to be very robust to sensory conflict, there are situations where sensory consistency improves vection.

History

Citation

Ash, A. & Palmisano, S. (2012). Vection during conflicting multisensory information about the axis, magnitude and direction of self-motion. Perception, 41 (3), 253-267.

Journal title

Perception

Volume

41

Issue

3

Pagination

253-267

Publisher website/DOI

Language

English

RIS ID

59070

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