نتایج جستجو برای: head movements

تعداد نتایج: 243456  

Journal: :Current Biology 2012
Martha W. Bagnall David L. McLean

A recent study suggests that animals can rely on internal expectations about their head movements, rather than vestibular sensations, to see what's in front of them.

Journal: :Journal of vision 2017
Athena Buckthought Ahmad Yoonessi Curtis L Baker

Motion parallax, the perception of depth resulting from an observer's self-movement, has almost always been studied with random dot textures in simplified orthographic rendering. Here we examine depth from motion parallax in more naturalistic conditions using textures with an overall 1/f spectrum and dynamic perspective rendering. We compared depth perception for orthographic and perspective re...

2017
Nicholas D Duran Riccardo Fusaroli

This study investigates the presence of dynamical patterns of interpersonal coordination in extended deceptive conversations across multimodal channels of behavior. Using a novel "devil's advocate" paradigm, we experimentally elicited deception and truth across topics in which conversational partners either agreed or disagreed, and where one partner was surreptitiously asked to argue an opinion...

Journal: :Annual review of neuroscience 2007
Melissa A Vollrath Kelvin Y Kwan David P Corey

Mechanical stimuli generated by head movements and changes in sound pressure are detected by hair cells with amazing speed and sensitivity. The mechanosensitive organelle, the hair bundle, is a highly elaborated structure of actin-based stereocilia arranged in precise rows of increasing height. Extracellular linkages contribute to its cohesion and convey forces to mechanically gated channels. C...

Journal: :Cortex 2013
Elisa R. Ferrè Gabriella Bottini Gian Domenico Iannetti Patrick Haggard

The vestibular system processes information about head movement and orientation. No unimodal vestibular cortex has been identified in the mammalian brain. Rather, vestibular inputs are combined with many other sensory signals in the cortex. This arrangement suggests that vestibular input could influence processing in other sensory modalities. Here we show that vestibular stimulation differentia...

Journal: :Vision Research 2006
Helena Grönqvist Gustaf Gredebäck Claes von Hofsten

The development of the asymmetry between horizontal and vertical eye tracking was investigated longitudinally at 5, 7, and 9 months of age. The target moved either on a 2D circular trajectory or on a vertical or horizontal 1D sinusoidal trajectory. Saccades, smooth pursuit, and head movements were measured. Vertical tracking was found to be inferior to horizontal tracking at all age levels. The...

Journal: :Vision Research 1995
Patrick Cavanagh Shinya Saidaj Josée Rivest

Perceived depth was measured in a colored stimulus while stimulus movement yoked to head displacement simulated a depth of 1 cm. Velocity judgments were also made for similar stimuli moving at the same average speed but without head movement. Both measures decreased to a minimum of about 30-40% of the veridical values when the stimuli were equiluminous. Perceived depth and speed also decreased ...

2013
Elisabeth J. Ploran Jacob Bevitt Jaris Oshiro Raja Parasuraman James C. Thompson

The ability to navigate flexibly (e.g., reorienting oneself based on distal landmarks to reach a learned target from a new position) may rely on visual scanning during both initial experiences with the environment and subsequent test trials. Reliance on visual scanning during navigation harkens back to the concept of vicarious trial and error, a description of the side-to-side head movements ma...

2016
Najmeh Sadoughi Carlos Busso

To have believable head movements for conversational agents (CAs), the natural coupling between speech and head movements needs to be preserved, even when the CA uses synthetic speech. To incorporate the relation between speech head movements, studies have learned these couplings from real recordings, where speech is used to derive head movements. However, relying on recorded speech for every s...

2017
Janine L. Johnston Pierre M. Daye Glen T. D. Thomson

BACKGROUND The primate ocular motor system is designed to acquire peripheral targets of interest by coordinating visual, vestibular, and neck muscle activation signals. The vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) is greatly reduced at the onset of large eye-head (gaze) saccades and resumes before the end of the saccades to stabilize eye-in-orbit and ensure accurate target acquisition. Previous studies ha...

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