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Auditorily-induced illusory self-motion: A review

Journal

BRAIN RESEARCH REVIEWS
Volume 61, Issue 2, Pages 240-255

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainresrev.2009.07.001

Keywords

Illusory self-motion; Vection; Spatial sound; Cognitive acoustics; Multisensory perception; Virtual auditory display; Auditory motion

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Funding

  1. European Community [IST-2001-39223]
  2. Swedish Research Council

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The aim of this paper is to provide a first review of studies related to auditorily-induced self-motion (vection). These studies have been scarce and scattered over the years and over several research communities including clinical audiology, multisensory perception of self-motion and its neural correlates, ergonomics, and virtual reality. The reviewed studies provide evidence that auditorily-induced vection has behavioral, physiological and neural correlates. Although the sound contribution to self-motion perception appears to be weaker than the visual modality, specific acoustic cues appear to be instrumental for a number of domains including posture prosthesis, navigation in unusual gravitoinertial environments (in the air, in space, or underwater), non-visual navigation, and multisensory integration during self-motion. A number of open research questions are highlighted opening avenue for more active and systematic studies in this area. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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