Department of Neurophysics, Philipps-Universität Marburg, Marburg, Germany.
Centre for Mind, Brain and Behavior, Philipps-Universität Marburg and Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen, Giessen, Germany.
J Neurophysiol. 2022 Nov 1;128(5):1355-1364. doi: 10.1152/jn.00231.2022. Epub 2022 Oct 19.
Self-motion through an environment induces various sensory signals, i.e., visual, vestibular, auditory, or tactile. Numerous studies have investigated the role of visual and vestibular stimulation for the perception of self-motion direction (heading). Here, we investigated the rarely considered interaction of visual and tactile stimuli in heading perception. Participants were presented optic flow simulating forward self-motion across a horizontal ground plane (visual), airflow toward the participants' forehead (tactile), or both. In separate blocks of trials, participants indicated perceived heading from unimodal visual or tactile or bimodal sensory signals. In bimodal trials, presented headings were either spatially congruent or incongruent with a maximum offset between visual and tactile heading of 30°. To investigate the reference frame in which visuo-tactile heading is encoded, we varied head and eye orientation during presentation of the stimuli. Visual and tactile stimuli were designed to achieve comparable precision of heading reports between modalities. Nevertheless, in bimodal trials heading perception was dominated by the visual stimulus. A change of head orientation had no significant effect on perceived heading, whereas, surprisingly, a change in eye orientation affected tactile heading perception. Overall, we conclude that tactile flow is more important to heading perception than previously thought. We investigated heading perception from visual-only (optic flow), tactile-only (tactile flow), or bimodal self-motion stimuli in different conditions varying in head and eye position. Overall, heading perception was body or world centered and non-Bayes optimal and revealed a centripetal bias. Although being visually dominated, tactile flow revealed a significant influence during bimodal heading perception.
自身运动通过环境会引起各种感觉信号,例如视觉、前庭觉、听觉或触觉。许多研究已经调查了视觉和前庭刺激在自我运动方向(朝向)感知中的作用。在这里,我们研究了在朝向感知中很少被考虑的视觉和触觉刺激的相互作用。参与者被呈现模拟水平地面上向前自我运动的光流(视觉)、朝向参与者前额的气流(触觉)或两者同时呈现。在单独的试验块中,参与者从单模态视觉或触觉或双模态感觉信号中指示感知的朝向。在双模态试验中,呈现的朝向要么在空间上与视觉和触觉朝向的最大偏移为 30°一致,要么不一致。为了研究视觉 - 触觉朝向编码的参考框架,我们在呈现刺激时改变了头部和眼睛的方向。视觉和触觉刺激的设计旨在实现模态之间可比的朝向报告精度。然而,在双模态试验中,朝向感知主要受视觉刺激的影响。头部方向的变化对感知的朝向没有显著影响,而令人惊讶的是,眼睛方向的变化影响了触觉朝向感知。总的来说,我们得出结论,触觉流对朝向感知的重要性比以前认为的要大。我们在不同条件下研究了仅视觉(光流)、仅触觉(触觉流)或双模态自我运动刺激的朝向感知,这些条件在头部和眼睛位置上有所变化。总的来说,朝向感知是身体或世界中心的,非贝叶斯最优的,并且表现出向心偏差。尽管在视觉上占主导地位,但触觉流在双模态朝向感知中显示出显著的影响。