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Diverse effects of gaze direction on heading perception in humans

Authors :
Wei Gao
Yipeng Lin
Jiangrong Shen
Jianing Han
Xiaoxiao Song
Yukun Lu
Huijia Zhan
Qianbing Li
Haoting Ge
Zheng Lin
Wenlei Shi
Jan Drugowitsch
Huajin Tang
Xiaodong Chen
Source :
Cerebral Cortex.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2023.

Abstract

Gaze change can misalign spatial reference frames encoding visual and vestibular signals in cortex, which may affect the heading discrimination. Here, by systematically manipulating the eye-in-head and head-on-body positions to change the gaze direction of subjects, the performance of heading discrimination was tested with visual, vestibular, and combined stimuli in a reaction-time task in which the reaction time is under the control of subjects. We found the gaze change induced substantial biases in perceived heading, increased the threshold of discrimination and reaction time of subjects in all stimulus conditions. For the visual stimulus, the gaze effects were induced by changing the eye-in-world position, and the perceived heading was biased in the opposite direction of gaze. In contrast, the vestibular gaze effects were induced by changing the eye-in-head position, and the perceived heading was biased in the same direction of gaze. Although the bias was reduced when the visual and vestibular stimuli were combined, integration of the 2 signals substantially deviated from predictions of an extended diffusion model that accumulates evidence optimally over time and across sensory modalities. These findings reveal diverse gaze effects on the heading discrimination and emphasize that the transformation of spatial reference frames may underlie the effects.

Details

ISSN :
14602199 and 10473211
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cerebral Cortex
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ae8813c88361488bde55e98fe5814e99
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhac541