TY - JOUR
T1 - A Vestibular Sensation
T2 - Probabilistic Approaches to Spatial Perception
AU - Angelaki, Dora E.
AU - Klier, Eliana M.
AU - Snyder, Lawrence H.
PY - 2009/11/25
Y1 - 2009/11/25
N2 - The vestibular system helps maintain equilibrium and clear vision through reflexes, but it also contributes to spatial perception. In recent years, research in the vestibular field has expanded to higher-level processing involving the cortex. Vestibular contributions to spatial cognition have been difficult to study because the circuits involved are inherently multisensory. Computational methods and the application of Bayes theorem are used to form hypotheses about how information from different sensory modalities is combined together with expectations based on past experience in order to obtain optimal estimates of cognitive variables like current spatial orientation. To test these hypotheses, neuronal populations are being recorded during active tasks in which subjects make decisions based on vestibular and visual or somatosensory information. This review highlights what is currently known about the role of vestibular information in these processes, the computations necessary to obtain the appropriate signals, and the benefits that have emerged thus far.
AB - The vestibular system helps maintain equilibrium and clear vision through reflexes, but it also contributes to spatial perception. In recent years, research in the vestibular field has expanded to higher-level processing involving the cortex. Vestibular contributions to spatial cognition have been difficult to study because the circuits involved are inherently multisensory. Computational methods and the application of Bayes theorem are used to form hypotheses about how information from different sensory modalities is combined together with expectations based on past experience in order to obtain optimal estimates of cognitive variables like current spatial orientation. To test these hypotheses, neuronal populations are being recorded during active tasks in which subjects make decisions based on vestibular and visual or somatosensory information. This review highlights what is currently known about the role of vestibular information in these processes, the computations necessary to obtain the appropriate signals, and the benefits that have emerged thus far.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.neuron.2009.11.010
DO - 10.1016/j.neuron.2009.11.010
M3 - Review article
C2 - 19945388
AN - SCOPUS:70449776443
SN - 0896-6273
VL - 64
SP - 448
EP - 461
JO - Neuron
JF - Neuron
IS - 4
ER -