Visual directional anisotropy does not mirror the directional anisotropy apparent in postural sway

Publication date

2015

Authors

Holten, VivianISNI 000000039650212X
Donker, Stella F.ISNI 0000000392676560
Stuit, SjoerdORCID 0000-0003-3891-2171ISNI 0000000419434423
Verstraten, FransISNI 0000000033767671
van de Smagt, MaartenORCID 0000-0003-2772-6429ISNI 0000000390366905

Editors

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Document Type

Article

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Abstract

Presenting a large optic flow pattern to observers is likely to cause postural sway. However, directional anisotropies have been reported, in that contracting optic flow induces more postural sway than expanding optic flow. Recently, we showed that the biomechanics of the lower leg cannot account for this anisotropy (Holten, Donker, Verstraten, & van der Smagt, 2013, Experimental Brain Research, 228, 117–129). The question we address in the current study is whether differences in visual processing of optic flow directions, in particular the perceptual strength of these directions, mirrors the anisotropy apparent in postural sway. That is, can contracting optic flow be considered to be a perceptually stronger visual stimulus than expanding optic flow? In the current study we use a breaking continuous flash suppression paradigm where we assume that perceptually stronger visual stimuli will break the flash suppression earlier, making the suppressed optic flow stimulus visible sooner. Surprisingly, our results show the opposite, in that expanding optic flow is detected earlier than contracting optic flow.

Keywords

Continuous flash suppression, Optic flow, Postural sway, Vision, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Artificial Intelligence, Sensory Systems

Citation

Holten, V, Donker, S F, Stuit, S M, Verstraten, F A J & van der Smagt, M J 2015, 'Visual directional anisotropy does not mirror the directional anisotropy apparent in postural sway', Perception, vol. 44, no. 5, pp. 477-489. https://doi.org/10.1068/p7925