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Characteristics of moving visual scenes influencing spatial orientationA visual display rotating in a frontal plane induces effects equivalent to a change in the apparent direction of gravity. Magnitude of visual tilt was measured as a function of time from onset of rotation, velocity of rotation, and area and retinal location of the stimulating field. The mejor part of the tilt occurs within 30 sec from onset of stimulation. It increases with angular velocity, but independently of area and location of field, up to about 30 to 40 deg of rotation per sec and then levels off. Tilt increases with field size but the effect of thin ring-fields increases with retinal eccentricity. The interaction of visual and nonvisual determinants of the induced effects is discussed.
Document ID
19750038133
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Held, R.
Bauer, J.
(MIT Cambridge, Mass., United States)
Dichgans, J.
(MIT, Cambridge, Mass.; Neurologische Universitaetsklinik Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany)
Date Acquired
August 8, 2013
Publication Date
March 1, 1975
Publication Information
Publication: Vision Research
Volume: 15
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Accession Number
75A22205
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NIH-1-R01-EY-01191-01
CONTRACT_GRANT: NGL-22-009-308
CONTRACT_GRANT: DFG-SFB-70
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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