» Articles » PMID: 18057110

Vestibular Nuclei and Cerebellum Put Visual Gravitational Motion in Context

Overview
Journal J Neurophysiol
Specialties Neurology
Physiology
Date 2007 Dec 7
PMID 18057110
Citations 45
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Animal survival in the forest, and human success on the sports field, often depend on the ability to seize a target on the fly. All bodies fall at the same rate in the gravitational field, but the corresponding retinal motion varies with apparent viewing distance. How then does the brain predict time-to-collision under gravity? A perspective context from natural or pictorial settings might afford accurate predictions of gravity's effects via the recovery of an environmental reference from the scene structure. We report that embedding motion in a pictorial scene facilitates interception of gravitational acceleration over unnatural acceleration, whereas a blank scene eliminates such bias. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) revealed blood-oxygen-level-dependent correlates of these visual context effects on gravitational motion processing in the vestibular nuclei and posterior cerebellar vermis. Our results suggest an early stage of integration of high-level visual analysis with gravity-related motion information, which may represent the substrate for perceptual constancy of ubiquitous gravitational motion.

Citing Articles

Target interception in virtual reality is better for natural versus unnatural trajectory shapes and orientations.

Varon S, Babin K, Spering M, Culham J J Vis. 2025; 25(1):11.

PMID: 39786733 PMC: 11725989. DOI: 10.1167/jov.25.1.11.


Impaired visual perceptual accuracy in the upper visual field induces asymmetric performance in position estimation for falling and rising objects.

Hirata T, Kawai N J Vis. 2025; 25(1):1.

PMID: 39745716 PMC: 11702824. DOI: 10.1167/jov.25.1.1.


Computational account for the naturalness perception of others' jumping motion based on a vertical projectile motion model.

Yokosaka T, Ujitoko Y, Kawabe T Proc Biol Sci. 2024; 291(2031):rspb20241490.

PMID: 39288810 PMC: 11407856. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2024.1490.


Human estimates of descending objects' motion are more accurate than those of ascending objects regardless of gravity information.

Hirata T, Hirata Y, Kawai N J Vis. 2024; 24(3):2.

PMID: 38436983 PMC: 10913939. DOI: 10.1167/jov.24.3.2.


Interception of vertically approaching objects: temporal recruitment of the internal model of gravity and contribution of optical information.

Delle Monache S, Paolocci G, Scalici F, Conti A, Lacquaniti F, Indovina I Front Physiol. 2023; 14:1266332.

PMID: 38046950 PMC: 10690631. DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2023.1266332.