Abstract:
When we turn ourselves, our sensory inputs somehow turn the world inside our head accordingly so as to stay in alignment
with the outside world. This spatial updating occurs automatically, without conscious effort, and is normally obligatory (i.e.,
cognitively impenetrable and hard to suppress). We pursued two main questions here: 1) Which cues are sufficient to initiate
obligatory spatial updating? 2) Under what circumstances do vestibular cues become important?
STIMULI: A photo-realistic virtual replica of the Tübingen market place was presented via a curved projection screen
(84x63° FOV). For vestibular stimulation, subjects were seated on a Stewart motion platform.
TASK: Subjects were rotated consecutively to random orientations and asked to point as accurately and quickly as possible to 4
out of 22 previously-learned targets. Targets were announced consecutively via headphones and chosen to be outside of the
current FOV.
Photo-realistic visual stimuli from a well-known environment including an abundance of salient landmarks allowed accurate
spatial updating (mean absolute pointing error, pointing variability, and response time were 16.5°, 17.0°, and 1.19s,
respectively). Moreover, those stimuli triggered spatial updating even when participants were asked to ignore turn cues and
point as if not having turned, (32.9°, 27.5°, 1.67s, respectively). Removing vestibular turn cues did not alter performance
significantly. This result conflicts with the prevailing opinion that vestibular cues are required for proper updating of
ego-turns. We did find that spatial updating benefitted from vestibular cues when visual turn information was degraded to a
mere optic flow pattern. Under all optic flow conditions, however, spatial updating was impaired and no longer obligatory.
We conclude that good visual landmarks can initiate obligatory spatial updating and overcome the visuo-vestibular cue
conflict.
SUPPORT: Max-Planck Society and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 550)