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University of Wollongong

Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences - Papers (Archive)

2011

Vection

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Simulated Viewpoint Jitter Shakes Sensory Conflict Accounts Of Vection, Stephen A. Palmisano, Robert S Allison, Juno Kim, Frederick Bonato Jan 2011

Simulated Viewpoint Jitter Shakes Sensory Conflict Accounts Of Vection, Stephen A. Palmisano, Robert S Allison, Juno Kim, Frederick Bonato

Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences - Papers (Archive)

Sensory conflict has been used to explain the way we perceive and control our self-motion, as well as the aetiology of motion sickness. However, recent research on simulated viewpoint jitter provides a strong challenge to one core prediction of these theories — that increasing sensory conflict should always impair visually induced illusions of self-motion (known as vection). These studies show that jittering self-motion displays (thought to generate significant and sustained visual–vestibular conflict) actually induce superior vection to comparable non-jittering displays (thought to generate only minimal/transient sensory conflict). Here we review viewpoint jitter effects on vection, postural sway, eye-movements and motion …