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Manual control of yaw motion with combined visual and vestibular cuesMeasurements are made of manual control performance in the closed-loop task of nulling perceived self-rotation velocity about an earth-vertical axis. Self-velocity estimation was modelled as a function of the simultaneous presentation of vestibular and peripheral visual field motion cues. Based on measured low-frequency operator behavior in three visual field environments, a parallel channel linear model is proposed which has separate visual and vestibular pathways summing in a complementary manner. A correction to the frequency responses is provided by a separate measurement of manual control performance in an analogous visual pursuit nulling task. The resulting dual-input describing function for motion perception dependence on combined cue presentation supports the complementary model, in which vestibular cues dominate sensation at frequencies above 0.05 Hz. The describing function model is extended by the proposal of a non-linear cue conflict model, in which cue weighting depends on the level of agreement between visual and vestibular cues.
Document ID
19790009342
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Zacharias, G. L.
(Massachusetts Inst. of Tech. Cambridge, MA, United States)
Young, L. R.
(Massachusetts Inst. of Tech. Cambridge, MA, United States)
Date Acquired
August 10, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1977
Publication Information
Publication: Proc., 13th Ann. Conf. on Manual Control
Subject Category
Behavioral Sciences
Accession Number
79N17513
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSG-2032
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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