Journal Article10.1126/SCIENCE.178.4066.1217
Moving visual scenes influence the apparent direction of gravity.
TL;DR: When an observer views a wide-angled display rotating around his line of sight, he both feels his body tilted and sees a vertical straight edge tilted opposite to the moving stimulus.
read more
Abstract: When an observer views a wide-angled display rotating around his line of sight, he both feels his body tilted and sees a vertical straight edge tilted opposite to the moving stimulus. Displacement of the perceived vertical increases with stimulus speed to reach a maximum (averaging 15 degrees) at 30 degrees per second.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
•Dissertation
Artificial gravity : evaluation of adaptation to head movements during short-radius centrifugation using subjective measures
Lisette Emma Lyne
- 01 Jan 2000
TL;DR: An experiment was performed to determine the ability of humans to adapt, and retain adaptation to out-of-plane head movements made during short-radius centrifugation, and the validity of these techniques were explored.
Postural Orientation and Equilibrium
Fay B. Horak,Jane M. MacPherson +1 more
TL;DR: This article explores the neural control of postural orientation and equilibrium, examining behavioral goals, biomechanical principles, and sensory integration, including somatosensory, vestibular, and visual systems, to understand postural coordination and control mechanisms.
•Dissertation
Human perception and control of vehicle roll tilt in hyper-gravity
Torin K. Clark
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a Table of Table of contents of the paper "Acknowledgements and acknowledgements of the authors of this paper: https://www.saliency.org.
The Influence of Stimulus Speed and Cognitive Factors on Cortical Responses to Vection-inducing Stimuli
Polina Andrievskaia
- 18 Jun 2024
TL;DR: Vection-inducing stimuli elicit increased alpha activity in parieto-occipital regions and are influenced by anxiety levels.
Motion in images is essential to cause motion sickness symptoms, but not to increase postural sway
TL;DR: In this experiment motion- and still images caused different levels of VIMS, but comparable increases in postural sway, which can be explained by visual effects present in still images.
References
Differential Effects of Central Versus Peripheral Vision on Egocentric and Exocentric Motion Perception
TL;DR: Simultaneous presentation of conflicting central and peripheral optokinetics stimuli has shown that exocentric orientation depends on the peripheral stimulus whereas optokinetic nystagmus and egocentric motion perception rely on the center of the visual field.
810
•Book
Cerebral control of eye movements and motion perception
Johannes Dichgans,Emilio Bizzi +1 more
- 01 Jan 1972
58