Holly Jan E, Wood Scott J, McCollum Gin
Department of Mathematics, Colby College, 5845 Mayflower Hill, Waterville, ME, 04901, USA.
Biol Cybern. 2010 Jan;102(1):9-29. doi: 10.1007/s00422-009-0347-0. Epub 2009 Nov 24.
Human off-vertical axis rotation (OVAR) in the dark typically produces perceived motion about a cone, the amplitude of which changes as a function of frequency. This perception is commonly attributed to the fact that both the OVAR and the conical motion have a gravity vector that rotates about the subject. Little-known, however, is that this rotating-gravity explanation for perceived conical motion is inconsistent with basic observations about self-motion perception: (a) that the perceived vertical moves toward alignment with the gravito-inertial acceleration (GIA) and (b) that perceived translation arises from perceived linear acceleration, as derived from the portion of the GIA not associated with gravity. Mathematically proved in this article is the fact that during OVAR these properties imply mismatched phase of perceived tilt and translation, in contrast to the common perception of matched phases which correspond to conical motion with pivot at the bottom. This result demonstrates that an additional perceptual rule is required to explain perception in OVAR. This study investigates, both analytically and computationally, the phase relationship between tilt and translation at different stimulus rates-slow (45 degrees /s) and fast (180 degrees /s), and the three-dimensional shape of predicted perceived motion, under different sets of hypotheses about self-motion perception. We propose that for human motion perception, there is a phase-linking of tilt and translation movements to construct a perception of one's overall motion path. Alternative hypotheses to achieve the phase match were tested with three-dimensional computational models, comparing the output with published experimental reports. The best fit with experimental data was the hypothesis that the phase of perceived translation was linked to perceived tilt, while the perceived tilt was determined by the GIA. This hypothesis successfully predicted the bottom-pivot cone commonly reported and a reduced sense of tilt during fast OVAR. Similar considerations apply to the hilltop illusion often reported during horizontal linear oscillation. Known response properties of central neurons are consistent with this ability to phase-link translation with tilt. In addition, the competing "standard" model was mathematically proved to be unable to predict the bottom-pivot cone regardless of the values used for parameters in the model.
人类在黑暗中进行离垂直轴旋转(OVAR)时,通常会产生围绕一个圆锥体的感知运动,其幅度会随频率变化。这种感知通常归因于OVAR和圆锥运动都有一个围绕主体旋转的重力矢量。然而,鲜为人知的是,这种对感知圆锥运动的旋转重力解释与关于自我运动感知的基本观察结果不一致:(a)感知到的垂直方向会朝着与重力惯性加速度(GIA)对齐的方向移动;(b)感知到的平移源于感知到的线性加速度,该线性加速度来自于GIA中与重力无关的部分。本文通过数学证明,在OVAR过程中,这些特性意味着感知到的倾斜和平移相位不匹配,这与通常认为的相位匹配(对应于底部有枢轴的圆锥运动)的感知不同。这一结果表明,需要一个额外的感知规则来解释OVAR中的感知。本研究通过分析和计算,研究了在不同刺激速率(慢,45度/秒;快,180度/秒)下倾斜和平移之间的相位关系,以及在关于自我运动感知的不同假设集下预测的感知运动的三维形状。我们提出,对于人类运动感知,倾斜和平移运动之间存在相位关联,以构建对自身整体运动路径的感知。用三维计算模型测试了实现相位匹配的替代假设,并将输出结果与已发表的实验报告进行比较。与实验数据最吻合的假设是,感知到的平移相位与感知到的倾斜相关联,而感知到的倾斜由GIA决定。这一假设成功地预测了常见的底部枢轴圆锥以及快速OVAR期间倾斜感的降低。类似的考虑也适用于水平线性振荡期间经常报告的山顶错觉。中枢神经元的已知反应特性与这种将平移与倾斜进行相位关联的能力是一致的。此外,经过数学证明,无论模型中使用的参数值如何,相互竞争的“标准”模型都无法预测底部枢轴圆锥。