4.2 Article

Effects of luminance contrast, averaged luminance and spatial frequency on vection

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 239, Issue 12, Pages 3507-3525

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00221-021-06214-5

Keywords

Vection; Luminance contrast; Averaged luminance; Spatial frequency; Speed; Motion perception

Categories

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science KAKENHI [21K03135]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [21K03135] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Changing the speed, size and material properties of optic flow can significantly alter the experience of vection. The study showed that vection strength could be significantly altered by manipulating visual properties such as luminance contrast, averaged luminance, and spatial frequency. Interactions between these factors were also found to affect the induced vection.
Changing the speed, size and material properties of optic flow can significantly alter the experience of vection (i.e. visually induced illusions of self-motion). Until now, there has not been a systematic investigation of the effects of luminance contrast, averaged luminance and stimulus spatial frequency on vection. This study examined the vection induced by horizontally oriented gratings that continuously drifted downwards at either 20 degrees or 60 degrees/s. Each of the visual motion stimuli tested had one of: (a) six different levels of luminance contrast; (b) four different levels of averaged luminance; and (c) four different spatial frequencies. Our experiments showed that vection could be significantly altered by manipulating each of these visual properties. Vection strength increased with the grating's luminance contrast (in Experiment 1), its averaged luminance (in Experiment 2), and its spatial frequency (in Experiment 3). Importantly, interactions between these three factors were also found for the vection induced in Experiment 4. While simulations showed that these vection results could have been caused by effects on stimulus motion energy, differences in perceived grating visibility, brightness or speed may have also contributed to our findings.

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