Jump to : Download | Abstract | Contact | BibTex reference | EndNote reference |

J8

F. Soyka, P. Robuffo Giordano, M. Barnett-Cowan, H. H. Bülthoff. Modeling direction discrimination thresholds for yaw rotations around an earth-vertical axis for arbitrary motion profiles. Experimental Brain Research, 220(1):89-99, July 2012.

Download [help]

Download paper: Doi page

Download paper: Adobe portable document (pdf) pdf

Copyright notice:

This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. These works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder. This page is automatically generated by bib2html v217, © Inria 2002-2024, Projet Lagadic/Rainbow

Abstract

Understanding the dynamics of vestibular perception is important, for example, for improving the realism of motion simulation and virtual reality environments or for diagnosing patients suffering from vestibular problems. Previous research has found a dependence of direction discrimination thresholds for rotational motions on the period length (inverse frequency) of a transient (single cycle) sinusoidal acceleration stimulus. However, self-motion is seldom purely sinusoidal, and up to now, no models have been proposed that take into account non-sinusoidal stimuli for rotational motions. In this work, the influence of both the period length and the specific time course of an inertial stimulus is investigated. Thresholds for three acceleration profile shapes (triangular, sinusoidal, and trapezoidal) were measured for three period lengths (0.3, 1.4, and 6.7 s) in ten participants. A two-alternative forced-choice discrimination task was used where participants had to judge if a yaw rotation around an earth-vertical axis was leftward or rightward. The peak velocity of the stimulus was varied, and the threshold was defined as the stimulus yielding 75 \% correct answers. In accordance with previous research, thresholds decreased with shortening period length (from \verb= =2 deg/s for 6.7 s to \verb= =0.8 deg/s for 0.3 s). The peak velocity was the determining factor for discrimination: Different profiles with the same period length have similar velocity thresholds. These measurements were used to fit a novel model based on a description of the firing rate of semi-circular canal neurons. In accordance with previous research, the estimates of the model parameters suggest that velocity storage does not influence perceptual thresholds

BibTex Reference

@article{J8,
   Author = {Soyka, F. and Robuffo Giordano, P. and Barnett-Cowan, M. and H. Bülthoff, H.},
   Title = {{Modeling direction discrimination thresholds for yaw rotations around an earth-vertical axis for arbitrary motion profiles}},
   Journal = {Experimental Brain Research},
   Volume = {    220},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {89--99},
   Month = {July},
   Year = {2012}
}

EndNote Reference [help]

Get EndNote Reference (.ref)