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Visual pursuit biases tactile velocity perception

  • During a smooth pursuit eye movement of a target stimulus, a briefly flashed stationary background appears to move in the opposite direction as the eye’s motion—an effect known as the Filehne illusion. Similar illusions occur in audition, in the vestibular system, and in touch. Recently, we found that the movement of a surface perceived from tactile slip was biased if this surface was sensed with the moving hand. The analogy between these two illusions suggests similar mechanisms of motion processing between the vision and touch. In the present study, we further assessed the interplay between these two sensory channels by investigating a novel paradigm that associated an eye pursuit of a visual target with a tactile motion over the skin of the fingertip. We showed that smooth pursuit eye movements can bias the perceived direction of motion in touch. Similarly to the classical report from the Filehne illusion in vision, a static tactile surface was perceived as moving rightward with a leftward eye pursuit movement, and vice versa. However, this time the direction of surface motion was perceived from touch. The biasing effects of eye pursuit on tactile motion were modulated by the reliability of the tactile and visual stimuli, consistently with a Bayesian model of motion perception. Overall, these results support a modality- and effector-independent process with common representations for motion perception.

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Author:Thies PfeifferORCiD, Cécile R. Scotto, Alessandro Moscatelli, Marc O. Ernst
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00541.2020
Parent Title (English):Journal of Neurophysiology
Document Type:Article
Language:English
Year of Completion:2021
Release Date:2025/03/05
Tag:Multisensory; Spatial Constancy
Cue Reliability; Haptics; Motion Perception
Volume:126
Issue:2
First Page:540
Last Page:549
Institute:Fachbereich Technik
Research Focus Area:Industrielle Informatik