van Asten W N, Gielen C C, Denier van der Gon J J
Department of Medical and Physiological Physics, University of Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Exp Brain Res. 1988;73(2):371-83. doi: 10.1007/BF00248230.
We have investigated how visual information of a scene, moving along the line of sight of a subject, affects postural readjustments made by a subject when instructed to maintain an upright posture. Two different types of stimulus patterns were presented each inducing a different optic flow field. In one case an optic flow field was induced by simulating motion of a subject relative to a wall and in the second case by stimulating motion of a subject through a tunnel. In both cases clear effects on postural balance were observed. It suggests that postural responses are invariant for the structure of the moving environment. The amplitude of the postural responses did not depend on the velocity of the simulated motion, and therefore did not depend on the absolute magnitude of the optic flow components. The amount of texture in the moving scene proved to be an important factor. In addition, it was found that the control of postural balance is not exclusively dominated by information provided by the peripheral part of the subject's visual field. Moreover, the results indicate that the divergence component in the optic-flow field alone is not sufficient to control posture in forward/backward direction.
我们研究了沿着受试者视线移动的场景视觉信息如何影响受试者在被指示保持直立姿势时所进行的姿势重新调整。呈现了两种不同类型的刺激模式,每种模式都会诱发不同的视流场。在一种情况下,通过模拟受试者相对于墙壁的运动来诱发视流场,在第二种情况下,通过刺激受试者在隧道中运动来诱发视流场。在这两种情况下,均观察到对姿势平衡有明显影响。这表明姿势反应对于移动环境的结构是不变的。姿势反应的幅度不取决于模拟运动的速度,因此也不取决于视流分量的绝对大小。事实证明,移动场景中的纹理量是一个重要因素。此外,研究发现姿势平衡的控制并非完全由受试者视野周边部分提供的信息主导。而且,结果表明仅视流场中的发散分量不足以控制前后方向的姿势。