Abstract
AbstractWhen human subjects tilt their heads in dark surroundings, the noisiness of vestibular information impedes precise reports on objects’ orientation with respect to earth’s vertical axis. This difficulty is mitigated if a vertical visual background is available. Tilted visual backgrounds induce feelings of head tilt in subjects who are in fact upright. This is often explained as a result of the brain resorting to the prior assumption that natural visual backgrounds are vertical. Here, we tested whether monkeys show comparable perceptual mechanisms. To this end we trained two monkeys to align a visual arrow to a vertical reference line that had variable luminance across trials, while including a large, clearly visible background square whose orientation changed from trial to trial. On around 20% of all trials, the vertical reference line was left out to measure the subjective visual vertical (SVV). When the frame was upright, the monkeys’SVVwas aligned with the gravitational vertical. In accordance with the perceptual reports of humans, however, when the frame was tilted, it induced an illusion of head tilt as indicated by a bias inSVVtowards the frame orientation. Thus all primates exploit the prior assumption that the visual world is vertical.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory