Induction and Cancellation of Self-Motion Misperception by Asymmetric Rotation in the Light.

contrast velocity stimulation perceptual adaptation perceptual vestibular recovery self-motion perception vestibular misperception

Journal

Audiology research
ISSN: 2039-4330
Titre abrégé: Audiol Res
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101644681

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
02 Mar 2023
Historique:
received: 27 11 2022
revised: 24 02 2023
accepted: 27 02 2023
entrez: 24 3 2023
pubmed: 25 3 2023
medline: 25 3 2023
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Asymmetrical sinusoidal whole-body rotation sequences with half-cycles at different velocities induce self-motion misperception. This is due to an adaptive process of the vestibular system that progressively reduces the perception of slow motion and increases that of fast motion. It was found that perceptual responses were conditioned by four previous cycles of asymmetric rotation in the dark, as the perception of self-motion during slow and fast rotations remained altered for several minutes. Surprisingly, this conditioned misperception remained even when asymmetric stimulation was performed in the light, a state in which vision completely cancels out the perceptual error. This suggests that vision is unable to cancel the misadaptation in the vestibular system but corrects it downstream in the central perceptual processing. Interestingly, the internal vestibular perceptual misperception can be cancelled by a sequence of asymmetric rotations with fast/slow half-cycles in a direction opposite to that of the conditioning asymmetric rotations.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36960980
pii: audiolres13020019
doi: 10.3390/audiolres13020019
pmc: PMC10037580
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

196-206

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Auteurs

Vito Enrico Pettorossi (VE)

Department of Medicine and Surgery, Section of Human Physiology, University of Perugia, 06132 Perugia, Italy.

Chiara Occhigrossi (C)

Department of Medicine and Surgery, Section of Human Physiology, University of Perugia, 06132 Perugia, Italy.

Roberto Panichi (R)

Department of Medicine and Surgery, Section of Human Physiology, University of Perugia, 06132 Perugia, Italy.

Fabio Massimo Botti (FM)

Department of Medicine and Surgery, Section of Human Physiology, University of Perugia, 06132 Perugia, Italy.

Aldo Ferraresi (A)

Department of Medicine and Surgery, Section of Human Physiology, University of Perugia, 06132 Perugia, Italy.

Giampietro Ricci (G)

Department of Medicine and Surgery, Section of Otorhinolaryngology, University of Perugia, 06132 Perugia, Italy.

Mario Faralli (M)

Department of Medicine and Surgery, Section of Otorhinolaryngology, University of Perugia, 06132 Perugia, Italy.

Classifications MeSH