Content area

Abstract

Despite the close interrelation between vestibular and visual processing (e.g., vestibulo-ocular reflex), surprisingly little is known about vestibular function in visually impaired people. In this study, we investigated thresholds of passive whole-body motion discrimination (leftward vs. rightward) in nine visually impaired participants and nine age-matched sighted controls. Participants were rotated in yaw, tilted in roll, and translated along the interaural axis at two different frequencies (0.33 and 2 Hz) by means of a motion platform. Superior performance of visually impaired participants was found in the 0.33 Hz roll tilt condition. No differences were observed in the other motion conditions. Roll tilts stimulate the semicircular canals and otoliths simultaneously. The results could thus reflect a specific improvement in canal-otolith integration in the visually impaired and are consistent with the compensatory hypothesis, which implies that the visually impaired are able to compensate the absence of visual input.

Details

Title
Self-motion direction discrimination in the visually impaired
Author
Moser, Ivan; Grabherr, Luzia; Hartmann, Matthias; Mast, Fred W
Pages
3221-3230
Publication year
2015
Publication date
Nov 2015
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
00144819
e-ISSN
14321106
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1727593701
Copyright
Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2015