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Self Motion Perception Through Visual Optic Flow And Vestibular Cues


Self Motion Perception Through Visual Optic Flow And Vestibular Cues
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Self Motion Perception Through Visual Optic Flow And Vestibular Cues


Self Motion Perception Through Visual Optic Flow And Vestibular Cues
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Author : Daniel Christopher Zikovitz
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 1998

Self Motion Perception Through Visual Optic Flow And Vestibular Cues written by Daniel Christopher Zikovitz and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 1998 with categories.




Self Motion Perception Through Visual Optic Flow And Vestibular Cues


Self Motion Perception Through Visual Optic Flow And Vestibular Cues
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Author :
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 1999

Self Motion Perception Through Visual Optic Flow And Vestibular Cues written by and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 1999 with categories.




Perception And Control Of Self Motion


Perception And Control Of Self Motion
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Author : Rik Warren
language : en
Publisher: Psychology Press
Release Date : 2014-01-14

Perception And Control Of Self Motion written by Rik Warren and has been published by Psychology Press this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2014-01-14 with Psychology categories.


This book presents studies of self-motion by an international group of basic and applied researchers including biologists, psychologists, comparative physiologists, kinesiologists, aerospace and control engineers, physicians, and physicists. Academia is well represented and accounts for most of the applied research offered. Basic theoretical research is further represented by private research companies and also by government laboratories on both sides of the Atlantic. Researchers and students of biology, psychology, physiology, kinesiology, engineering, and physics who have an interest in self-motion -- whether it be underwater, in space, or on solid ground -- will find this volume of interest. This book presents studies of self-motion by an international group of basic and applied researchers including biologists, psychologists, comparative physiologists, kinesiologists, aerospace and control engineers, physicians, and physicists. Academia is well represented and accounts for most of the applied research offered. Basic theoretical research is further represented by private research companies and also by government laboratories on both sides of the Atlantic. Researchers and students of biology, psychology, physiology, kinesiology, engineering, and physics who have an interest in self-motion -- whether it be underwater, in space, or on solid ground -- will find this volume of interest.



Optic Flow And Beyond


Optic Flow And Beyond
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Author : L.M. Vaina
language : en
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Release Date : 2004-04-30

Optic Flow And Beyond written by L.M. Vaina and has been published by Springer Science & Business Media this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2004-04-30 with Medical categories.


Optic flow provides all the information necessary to guide a walking human or a mobile robot to its target. Over the past 50 years, a body of research on optic flow spanning the disciplines of neurophysiology, psychophysics, experimental psychology, brain imaging and computational modelling has accumulated. Today, when we survey the field, we find independent lines of research have now converged and many arguments have been resolved; simultaneously the underpinning assumptions of flow theory are being questioned and alternative accounts of the visual guidance of locomotion proposed. At this critical juncture, this volume offers a timely review of what has been learnt and pointers to where the field is going.



Neural Basis Of Object Motion Perception During Self Motion


Neural Basis Of Object Motion Perception During Self Motion
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Author : Nicole E. Peltier
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 2020

Neural Basis Of Object Motion Perception During Self Motion written by Nicole E. Peltier and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2020 with Motion perception (Vision) categories.


"The ability to perceive independently moving objects during self-motion is vital for reaching goals and avoiding obstacles. Self-motion generates a structured pattern of retinal motion called optic flow. An independently moving object produces retinal motion that is the vector sum of its world-relative motion and the optic flow created by the observer's self-motion. To interpret the object's world-relative motion, an observer must compensate for their self-motion. The flow-parsing hypothesis posits that the visual system may accomplish this compensation by globally subtracting out the optic flow due to self-motion (Rushton & Warren, 2005; P.A. Warren & Rushton, 2007, 2009a). This subtraction induces a perceptual bias (in retinal coordinates) away from the optic flow vector at the object's location. Despite psychophysical evidence for flow parsing in humans, the neural mechanisms underlying flow parsing remained unknown. This thesis presents the first evidence for a neural correlate to flow parsing in the middle temporal area (MT). First, we tested the flow-parsing hypothesis in an animal model using macaque monkeys. Two monkeys discriminated the direction of a moving object in the presence of optic flow simulating self-motion. Perception of object motion was biased in a manner consistent with flow parsing. Biases generally depended on the direction and magnitude of the optic flow vectors to subtract at the object's location. The addition of vestibular self-motion cues increased flow-parsing biases in a multiplicative manner. This perceptual evidence of flow parsing in monkeys positioned us to investigate its neural mechanisms. Next, we recorded neural activity in area MT while monkeys performed the same flow-parsing discrimination task. The responses of individual MT units to object motion were modulated by optic flow, and this modulation depended on a unit's direction tuning. We used population decoding to demonstrate that MT populations convey information about choice, retinal object motion, and world-relative object motion. Finally, we characterized the effect of optic flow on MT direction tuning curves by modeling each unit's reference frame as a weighted average of retinal and world-centered. The average MT unit modestly shifted its reference frame from retinal toward world-centered. These small shifts suggest that MT plays a role in a more extensive flow-parsing network"--Pages x-xi



Neuronal Processing Of Optic Flow


Neuronal Processing Of Optic Flow
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Author :
language : en
Publisher: Academic Press
Release Date : 1999-12-06

Neuronal Processing Of Optic Flow written by and has been published by Academic Press this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 1999-12-06 with Science categories.


When we walk, drive a car, or fly an airplane, visual motion is used to control and guide our movement. Optic flow describes the characteristic pattern of visual motion that arises in these situations. This book is the first to take an in-depth look at the neuronal processing strategies that underlie the brain's ability to analyze and use optic flow for the control of self-motion. It does so in a variety of species which use optic flow in different behavioral contexts. The spectrum ranges from flying insects to birds, higher mammals and man. The contributions cover physiological and behavioral studies as well as computational models. Neuronal Processing of Optic Flow provides an authoritative and comprehensive overview of the current state of research on this topic written by a group of authors who have made essential contributions to shaping this field of research over the last ten years. Provides the first detailed overview of the analysis of complex visual motion patterns in the brain Includes physiological, behavioral, and computational aspects of optic flow processing Highlights similarities and differences between different animal species and behavioral tasks Covers human patients with visual motion deficits Enhances the reader's understanding with many illustrations



Visual Motion And Self Motion Processing In The Human Brain Mpi Series In Biological Cybernetics Bd 31


Visual Motion And Self Motion Processing In The Human Brain Mpi Series In Biological Cybernetics Bd 31
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Author : Elvira Fischer
language : en
Publisher: Logos Verlag Berlin GmbH
Release Date : 2011

Visual Motion And Self Motion Processing In The Human Brain Mpi Series In Biological Cybernetics Bd 31 written by Elvira Fischer and has been published by Logos Verlag Berlin GmbH this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2011 with Psychology categories.


For the successful recognition of objective, `real' motion based on visual cues it is necessary to take self-induced motion signals into account, such as those induced by eye-movements. During a series of fMRI studies we measured responses of visual and parietal regions to motion cues derived from (a) retinal motion, (b) eyemovements (visual pursuit) and (c) objective, (real) motion. We show that the recently described cingulate sulcus visual area (CSv) is not, as implied before, primarily driven by 3D self-motion cues but favoured 2D translational coherent motion over 3D expanding flow fields. Further, we found that V3A is capable of integrating retinal motion with eye-movements, thus allowing V3A to respond to object motion independent of retinal motion. This allowed us to define a new functional localizer for area V3A. Finally, we showed that activity in the foveal representation of the early visual cortex is driven by a combination of retinal input and by error signals as hypothesized by of Rao and Ballard (1999) for predictive coding. Taken together, this work provides evidence that regions V3A and CSv are key regions concerning visual self-motion processing and that early visual regions might be modulated by feedback from higher motion processing regions.



The Perception Of Object Motion During Self Motion


The Perception Of Object Motion During Self Motion
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Author : Diederick Christian Niehorster
language : en
Publisher: Open Dissertation Press
Release Date : 2017-01-26

The Perception Of Object Motion During Self Motion written by Diederick Christian Niehorster and has been published by Open Dissertation Press this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2017-01-26 with categories.


This dissertation, "The Perception of Object Motion During Self-motion" by Diederick Christian, Niehorster, was obtained from The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong) and is being sold pursuant to Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0 Hong Kong License. The content of this dissertation has not been altered in any way. We have altered the formatting in order to facilitate the ease of printing and reading of the dissertation. All rights not granted by the above license are retained by the author. Abstract: When we stand still and do not move our eyes and head, the motion of an object in the world or the absence thereof is directly given by the motion or quiescence of the retinal image. Self-motion through the world however complicates this retinal image. During self-motion, the whole retinal image undergoes coherent global motion, called optic flow. Self-motion therefore causes the retinal motion of objects moving in the world to be confounded by a motion component due to self-motion. How then do we perceive the motion of an object in the world when we ourselves are also moving? Although non-visual information about self-motion, such as provided by efference copies of motor commands and vestibular stimulation, might play a role in this ability, it has recently been shown that the brain possesses a purely visual mechanism that underlies scene-relative object motion perception during self-motion. In the flow parsing hypothesis developed by Rushton and Warren (2005; Warren & Rushton, 2007; 2009b), the brain uses its sensitivity to optic flow to detect and globally remove retinal motion due to self-motion and recover the scene-relative motion of objects. Research into this perceptual ability has so far been of a qualitative nature. In this thesis, I therefore develop a retinal motion nulling paradigm to measure the gain with which the flow parsing mechanism uses the optic flow to remove the self-motion component from an object's retinal motion. I use this paradigm to investigate how accurate scene-relative object motion perception during self-motion can be based on only visual information, whether this flow parsing process depends on a percept of the direction of self-motion and the tuning of flow parsing, i.e., how it is modulated by changes in various stimulus aspects. The results reveal that although adding monocular or binocular depth information to the display to precisely specify the moving object's 3D position in the scene improved the accuracy of flow parsing, the flow parsing gain was never up to the extent required by the scene geometry. Furthermore, the flow parsing gain was lower at higher eccentricities from the focus of expansion in the flow field and was strongly modulated by changes in the motion angle between the self-motion and object motion components in the retinal motion of the moving object, the speeds of these components and the density of the flow field. Lastly, flow parsing was not affected by illusory changes in the perceived direction of self-motion. In conclusion, visual information alone is not sufficient for accurate perception of scene-relative object motion during self-motion. Furthermore, flow parsing takes the 3D position of the moving object in the scene into account and is not a uniform global subtraction process. 8e observed tuning characteristics are different from those of local perceived motion interactions, providing evidence that flow parsing is a separate process from these local motion interactions. Finally, flow parsing does not depend on a prior percept of self-motion direction and instead directly uses the input retinal motion to construct percepts of scene-relative object motion during self-motion. DOI: 10.5353/th_b5177318 Subjects: Motion perception (Vision)



Analysis Of The Visual Information For Self Motion Perception


Analysis Of The Visual Information For Self Motion Perception
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Author : Sheryl Maxine Ehrlich
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 1998

Analysis Of The Visual Information For Self Motion Perception written by Sheryl Maxine Ehrlich and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 1998 with Movement, Psychology of categories.




Tutorials On Motion Perception


Tutorials On Motion Perception
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Author : Alexander H. Wertheim
language : en
Publisher: Springer
Release Date : 1982-10

Tutorials On Motion Perception written by Alexander H. Wertheim and has been published by Springer this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 1982-10 with Gardening categories.


From August 24-29, 1980 the international "Symposium on the Study of Motion Perception; Recent Developments and Applications", sponsored by NATO and organized by the editors of this book, was held in Veldhoven, the Netherlands. The meeting was attended by about eighty scholars, including psychologists, neurologists, physicists and other scientists, from fourteen different countries. During the symposium some fifty research papers were presented and a series of tutorial review papers were read and discussed. The research presentations have been published in a special issue of the international journal of psychonomics "Acta Psychologica" (Vol. 48, 1981). The present book is a compilation of the tutorial papers. The tutorials were arranged around early versions of the chapters now appearing in this book. The long discussions at the Veldhoven tutorial sessions resulted in extensive revisions of the texts prior to this publication. Unfortunately this led to a delay in publication, but we feel that this was justified by a greater depth of understanding which, in our opinion, has significantly increased the quality of the book. As they now stand, the chapters cover most of the issues relevant to the study of motion perception. Also they clearly reflect the intensive exchange of knowledge that took place during the symposium. As such we think that this book can be used both as an advanced text for students and scientists alike and as a comprehensive reference source.