Effects of Body Orientation Relative to Gravity on Vection in Children and Adults

Author:

Oyamada Keisuke1,Ujita Musashi2,Imura Tomoko3,Shirai Nobu4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Graduate School of Arts and Letters, Tohoku University

2. Department of Information Systems, Faculty of Information Culture, Niigata University of International and Information Studies

3. Department of Psychology, Faculty of Integrated Arts and Social Sciences, Japan Women’s University

4. Department of Psychology, Faculty of Humanities, Niigata University

Abstract

We investigated the effects of the interaction between the body and gravitational axes on vection (visually induced self-motion perception) in school-age children and adults. Experiment 1 was a pilot study of adults that was conducted to determine the appropriate experimental settings for the main experiment that included children and adults. The adult participants experienced vection in four different directions in the head-centered coordinate (forward, backward, upward, and downward) under two postural conditions: standing (in which the body and gravitational axes were consistent) and supine (in which the body orientation was orthogonally aligned to the gravitational axis). The adults reported more rapid and longer lasting vection when standing than when supine. In the main experiment (Experiment 2), we tested adults and school-age children under conditions similar to those of Experiment 1 and found that the reported vection was more rapid and longer lasting in children than in adults, whereas the reported vection tended to be more rapid and longer lasting under the standing condition than the supine condition for both age groups. Based on the similarities and differences between children and adults found in the present and previous vection studies, child-specific features of vection are discussed.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Sensory Systems,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Ophthalmology

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