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Vection induced by low-level motion extracted from complex animation films

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posted on 2024-11-14, 18:30 authored by Wataru Suzuki, Takeharu Seno, Wakato Yamashita, Noritaka Ichinohe, Hiroshige Takeichi, Stephen PalmisanoStephen Palmisano
This study examined the contributions of low-, mid- and high-level visual motion information to vection. We compared the vection experiences induced by hand-drawn and computer-generated animation clips to those induced by versions of these movies that contained only their pure optic flow. While the original movies were found to induce longer and stronger vection experiences than the pure optic flow, vection onsets were not significantly altered by removing the mid- and high-level information. We conclude that low-level visual motion information appears to be important for vection induction, whereas mid- and higher-level display information appears to be important for sustaining and strengthening this vection after its initial induction.

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Citation

Suzuki, W., Seno, T., Yamashita, W., Ichinohe, N., Takeichi, H. & Palmisano, S. (2019). Vection induced by low-level motion extracted from complex animation films. Experimental Brain Research, 237 (12), 3321-3332.

Journal title

Experimental Brain Research

Volume

237

Issue

12

Pagination

3321-3332

Language

English

RIS ID

140199

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