1 / 1

SELF-MOTION PERCEPTION: ASSESSMENT BY REAL-TIME COMPUTER-GENERATED ANIMATIONS

SELF-MOTION PERCEPTION: ASSESSMENT BY REAL-TIME COMPUTER-GENERATED ANIMATIONS. D.E. Parker and J.O. Philips: Department of Otolaryngology - HNS and HTIL, University of Washington. RESULTS: EXPERIMENTS 1 AND 2 PERCEIVED PITCH HEAD DIRECTIONS DID NOT CORRESPOND TO PREDICTIONS

orea
Download Presentation

SELF-MOTION PERCEPTION: ASSESSMENT BY REAL-TIME COMPUTER-GENERATED ANIMATIONS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SELF-MOTION PERCEPTION: ASSESSMENT BY REAL-TIME COMPUTER-GENERATED ANIMATIONS D.E. Parker and J.O. Philips: Department of Otolaryngology - HNS and HTIL, University of Washington • RESULTS: EXPERIMENTS 1 AND 2 • PERCEIVED PITCH HEAD DIRECTIONS DID NOT CORRESPOND TO PREDICTIONS • EXPERIMENT 1 • STIMULUS EXPECTED PERCEPTION %OBSERVED • ROTATION DIRECTION • /HEAD ROLL DIRECTION • CW-R / CCW-L REARWARD 76% • CCW-R / CW-L FORWARD 38% • EXPERIMENT 2 • CW-R / CCW-L REARWARD 54% • CCW-R / CW-L FORWARD 33% • EXPERIMENT 3: EYE MOVEMENTS • RESULTS: EXPERIMENT 3 • SLOW PHASE EYE MOVEMENT DIRECTIONS CORRESPONDED TO PREDICTIONS; BUT PERCEIVED PITCH HEAD DIRECTIONS DID NOT • STIMULUS EXPECTED %OBSERVED EXPECTED %OBSERVED • PERCEPTION SLOW-PHASE • ROTATION DIRECTIONDIRECTION • -HEAD ROLL DIRECTION • CW-R / CCW-L REARWARD38% DOWN96% • CCW-R / CW-L FORWARD 22% UP 100% • CONCLUSIONS • OUR NON-VERBAL PERCEPTUAL REPORTING PROCEDURE SUPPORTS SELF-MOTION PERCEPTION REPORTING. • PERCEPTUAL REPORTS DID NOT CORRESPOND TO EXPECTATIONS BASED ON MECHANICAL STIMULI TO VESTIBULAR APPARATUS AND PREVIOUS REPORTS (GUEDRY & MONTAGUE, 1961; GUEDRY, 1974). • DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE RESULTS OF THE PRESENT STUDY AND PREVIOUS ONES MAY BE DUE TO SUBJECTS’ TRAINING AND EXPECTATIONS. • OUR EYE MOVEMENT DATA SUPPORT THOSE REPORTED BY GUEDRY AND MONTAGUE. • OVERALL GOAL: PERCEPTUAL TESTS FOR VESTIBULAR FUNCTION • A NEW PROCEDURE FOR SELF-MOTION ASSESSMENT • WHY STUDY PERCEPTION? • DISCREPANCIES BETWEEN EYE MOVEMENT RESPONSES AND SELF-MOTION PERCEPTION, ESPECIALLY DURING ADAPTATION • POSSIBLE ADVANTAGES OF ANIMATIONS TO STUDY SELF-MOTION PERCEPTION • DON’T NEED WORDS • SELF-MOTION OCCURS WITH 6 DOF (COMPLEX SELF-MOTION MAY BE EVOKED BY SIMPLE STIMULATION) • BODY IS AN ARTICULATED SYSTEM (BODY PARTS MAY MOVE RELATIVE TO ONE ANOTHER) • VISUAL SCENE AND SELF MAY MOVE DIFFERENTLY • ANIMATIONS STUDY PROCEDURE • STIMULUS: CROSS-COUPLED ANGULAR ACCELERATION (HEAD ROLL DURING EARTH-VERTICAL ROTATION) • SUBJECTS MANIPULATE REAL DOLL’S HEAD SO THAT THE VIRTUAL DOLL’S HEAD DISPLAYED ON MONITOR MOVES IN MANNER THAT CORRESPONDS TO PERCEIVED HEAD MOTION (MAGNETIC FIELD TRACKER EMBEDDED IN REAL DOLL’S HEAD) • ANIMATIONS RECORDED FOR LATER ANALYSIS • RECORD VERTICAL EYE MOVEMENTS (EXPERIMENT 3) Fig. 3. Four-second segment of EOG for Subject 3, Trail 1. Chair rotation was counter-clockwise (viewed from above). At time 57.7, the subject rolled her head from her right to her left shoulder (indicated by step function). Slow-phase down nystagmus appeared after about 1.3 s. Slow-phase direction was as predicted. Fig. 1. Illusory self-motion was produced by head roll during yaw axis, earth-vertical rotation. For leftward head roll during counter-clockwise rotation, illusory rearward head pitch and downward slow phase eye movements would be expected. Fig. 2. 2A. Selected frames from animation.Stimulus: head roll from right to left during CCW rotation. The real leftward head roll accompanied by illusory forward head pitch; as the roll motion was completed, brief leftward yaw was recorded. The subject reported verbally that her head went “forward and then slight rotation.” 2B. “Pitch”, “roll” and “roll” path signals (ordinate) as a function of frame (24 frames / s). Frames 15-75 illustrate leftward head roll which was accompanied by forward pitch (frames 15-50). Leftward head yaw is illustrated in frames 45-120. This project is sponsored by:NASA Grants NAG5-4074 and 9-958

More Related