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Temporal synchrony effects of optic flow and vestibular inputs on multisensory heading perception

Qihao Zheng, Luxin Zhou, Yong Gu

2021Cell Reports23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Precise heading perception requires integration of optic flow and vestibular cues, yet the two cues often carry distinct temporal dynamics that may confound cue integration benefit. Here, we varied temporal offset between the two sensory inputs while macaques discriminated headings around straight ahead. We find the best heading performance does not occur under natural condition of synchronous inputs with zero offset but rather when visual stimuli are artificially adjusted to lead vestibular by a few hundreds of milliseconds. This amount exactly matches the lag between the vestibular acceleration and visual speed signals as measured from single-unit-activity in frontal and posterior parietal cortices. Manually aligning cues in these areas best facilitates integration with some nonlinear gain modulation effects. These findings are consistent with predictions from a model by which the brain integrates optic flow speed with a faster vestibular acceleration signal for sensing instantaneous heading direction during self-motion in the environment.

Topics & Concepts

Vestibular systemHeading (navigation)Sensory systemPerceptionComputer scienceMultisensory integrationOffset (computer science)Sensory cueMotion perceptionVisual perceptionAccelerationOptical flowComputer visionArtificial intelligencePsychologyNeurosciencePhysicsGeodesyImage (mathematics)GeographyClassical mechanicsProgramming languageVisual perception and processing mechanismsVestibular and auditory disordersOlfactory and Sensory Function Studies
Temporal synchrony effects of optic flow and vestibular inputs on multisensory heading perception | Litcius