| Literature DB >> 29755720 |
Nobu Shirai1, Shuich Endo2, Shigehito Tanahashi3, Takeharu Seno4, Tomoko Imura5.
Abstract
Vection is illusory self-motion elicited by visual stimuli and is more easily induced by radial contraction than expansion flow in adults. The asymmetric feature of vection was reexamined with 18 younger (age: 6-8 years) and 19 older children (age: 9-11 years) and 20 adults. In each experimental trial, participants observed either radial expansion or contraction flow; the latency, cumulative duration, and saturation of vection were measured. The results indicated that the latency for contraction was significantly shorter than that for expansion in all age-groups. In addition, the latency and saturation were significantly shorter and greater, respectively, in the younger or older children compared with the adults, regardless of the flow pattern. These results indicate that the asymmetry in vection for expansion or contraction flow emerges by school age, and that school-age children experience significantly more rapid and stronger vection than adults.Entities:
Keywords: asymmetry; development; expansion or contraction; vection
Year: 2018 PMID: 29755720 PMCID: PMC5937634 DOI: 10.1177/2041669518761191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iperception ISSN: 2041-6695
Figure 1.Experimental results. The vertical axes show the (a) mean latency, (b) mean duration of the reported vection, and (c) mean saturation (mean distance between the left edge of a VAS and the vertical intersection drawn by the participants on the scale). Dark bars indicate the results under the expansion condition, and white bars indicate the results under the contraction condition. Error bars indicate ± 1 SEM. VAS = visual analogue scale.