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Erschienen in: Experimental Brain Research 4/2008

01.04.2008 | Research Note

Vestibular thresholds for yaw rotation about an earth-vertical axis as a function of frequency

verfasst von: Luzia Grabherr, Keyvan Nicoucar, Fred W. Mast, Daniel M. Merfeld

Erschienen in: Experimental Brain Research | Ausgabe 4/2008

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Abstract

Perceptual direction detection thresholds for yaw rotation about an earth-vertical axis were measured at seven frequencies (0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.5, 1, 2, and 5 Hz) in seven subjects in the dark. Motion stimuli consisted of single cycles of sinusoidal acceleration and were generated by a motion platform. An adaptive two-alternative categorical forced-choice procedure was used. The subjects had to indicate by button presses whether they perceived yaw rotation to the left or to the right. Thresholds were measured using a 3-down, 1-up staircase paradigm. Mean yaw rotation velocity thresholds were 2.8 deg s−1 for 0.05 Hz, 2.5 deg s−1 for 0.1 Hz, 1.7 deg s−1 for 0.2 Hz, 0.7 deg s−1 for 0.5 Hz, 0.6 deg s−1 for 1 Hz, 0.4 deg s−1 for 2 Hz, and 0.6 deg s−1 for 5 Hz. The results show that motion thresholds increase at 0.2 Hz and below and plateau at 0.5 Hz and above. Increasing velocity thresholds at lower frequencies qualitatively mimic the high-pass characteristics of the semicircular canals, since the increase at 0.2 Hz and below would be consistent with decreased gain/sensitivity observed in the VOR at lower frequencies. In fact, the measured dynamics are consistent with a high pass filter having a threshold plateau of 0.71 deg s-1 and a cut-off frequency of 0.23 Hz, which corresponds to a time constant of approximately 0.70 s. These findings provide no evidence for an influence of velocity storage on perceptual yaw rotation thresholds.
Fußnoten
1
We use the term threshold as often defined by psychophysicists using signal detection theory, which is the level at which a signal becomes detectable relative to noise—where the noise includes noise inherent to the sensory system and may also include noise applied intentionally or incidentally via the stimuli.
 
2
The concept of velocity storage (Raphan et al. 1977; Robinson 1977) was published after Guedry’s (1974) review.
 
3
A possible right side horizontal canal paresis was detected in one subject, and a slight VOR asymmetry in the other.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Vestibular thresholds for yaw rotation about an earth-vertical axis as a function of frequency
verfasst von
Luzia Grabherr
Keyvan Nicoucar
Fred W. Mast
Daniel M. Merfeld
Publikationsdatum
01.04.2008
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Experimental Brain Research / Ausgabe 4/2008
Print ISSN: 0014-4819
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-1106
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-008-1350-8

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