Biases in the Visual and Haptic Subjective Vertical Reveal the Role of Proprioceptive/Vestibular Priors in Child Development

Investigation of the perception of verticality permits to disclose the perceptual mechanisms that underlie balance control and spatial navigation. Estimation of verticality in unusual body orientation with respect to gravity (e.g., laterally tilted in the roll plane) leads to biases that change depe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Luigi F. Cuturi, Monica Gori
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Neurology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fneur.2018.01151/full
id doaj-d37f91e44c204dfcb4a24d7176400a9b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d37f91e44c204dfcb4a24d7176400a9b2020-11-24T21:18:04ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neurology1664-22952019-01-01910.3389/fneur.2018.01151426197Biases in the Visual and Haptic Subjective Vertical Reveal the Role of Proprioceptive/Vestibular Priors in Child DevelopmentLuigi F. CuturiMonica GoriInvestigation of the perception of verticality permits to disclose the perceptual mechanisms that underlie balance control and spatial navigation. Estimation of verticality in unusual body orientation with respect to gravity (e.g., laterally tilted in the roll plane) leads to biases that change depending on the encoding sensory modality and the amount of tilt. A well-known phenomenon is the A-effect, that is a bias toward the body tilt often interpreted in a Bayesian framework to be the byproduct of a prior peaked at the most common head and body orientation, i.e., upright. In this study, we took advantage of this phenomenon to study the interaction of visual, haptic sensory information with vestibular/proprioceptive priors across development. We tested children (5–13 y.o) and adults (>22 y.o.) in an orientation discrimination task laterally tilted 90° to their left-ear side. Experimental conditions differed for the tested sensory modality: visual-only, haptic-only, both modalities. Resulting accuracy depended on the developmental stage and the encoding sensory modality, showing A-effects in vision across all ages and in the haptic modality only for the youngest children whereas bimodal judgments show lack of multisensory integration in children. A Bayesian prior model nicely predicts the behavioral data when the peak of the prior distribution shifts across age groups. Our results suggest that vision is pivotal to acquire an idiotropic vector useful for improving precision when upright. The acquisition of such a prior might be related to the development of head and trunk coordination, a process that is fundamental for gaining successful spatial navigation.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fneur.2018.01151/fullsubjective verticalvisionhapticdevelopmentvestibularbayesian
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luigi F. Cuturi
Monica Gori
spellingShingle Luigi F. Cuturi
Monica Gori
Biases in the Visual and Haptic Subjective Vertical Reveal the Role of Proprioceptive/Vestibular Priors in Child Development
Frontiers in Neurology
subjective vertical
vision
haptic
development
vestibular
bayesian
author_facet Luigi F. Cuturi
Monica Gori
author_sort Luigi F. Cuturi
title Biases in the Visual and Haptic Subjective Vertical Reveal the Role of Proprioceptive/Vestibular Priors in Child Development
title_short Biases in the Visual and Haptic Subjective Vertical Reveal the Role of Proprioceptive/Vestibular Priors in Child Development
title_full Biases in the Visual and Haptic Subjective Vertical Reveal the Role of Proprioceptive/Vestibular Priors in Child Development
title_fullStr Biases in the Visual and Haptic Subjective Vertical Reveal the Role of Proprioceptive/Vestibular Priors in Child Development
title_full_unstemmed Biases in the Visual and Haptic Subjective Vertical Reveal the Role of Proprioceptive/Vestibular Priors in Child Development
title_sort biases in the visual and haptic subjective vertical reveal the role of proprioceptive/vestibular priors in child development
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neurology
issn 1664-2295
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Investigation of the perception of verticality permits to disclose the perceptual mechanisms that underlie balance control and spatial navigation. Estimation of verticality in unusual body orientation with respect to gravity (e.g., laterally tilted in the roll plane) leads to biases that change depending on the encoding sensory modality and the amount of tilt. A well-known phenomenon is the A-effect, that is a bias toward the body tilt often interpreted in a Bayesian framework to be the byproduct of a prior peaked at the most common head and body orientation, i.e., upright. In this study, we took advantage of this phenomenon to study the interaction of visual, haptic sensory information with vestibular/proprioceptive priors across development. We tested children (5–13 y.o) and adults (>22 y.o.) in an orientation discrimination task laterally tilted 90° to their left-ear side. Experimental conditions differed for the tested sensory modality: visual-only, haptic-only, both modalities. Resulting accuracy depended on the developmental stage and the encoding sensory modality, showing A-effects in vision across all ages and in the haptic modality only for the youngest children whereas bimodal judgments show lack of multisensory integration in children. A Bayesian prior model nicely predicts the behavioral data when the peak of the prior distribution shifts across age groups. Our results suggest that vision is pivotal to acquire an idiotropic vector useful for improving precision when upright. The acquisition of such a prior might be related to the development of head and trunk coordination, a process that is fundamental for gaining successful spatial navigation.
topic subjective vertical
vision
haptic
development
vestibular
bayesian
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fneur.2018.01151/full
work_keys_str_mv AT luigifcuturi biasesinthevisualandhapticsubjectiveverticalrevealtheroleofproprioceptivevestibularpriorsinchilddevelopment
AT monicagori biasesinthevisualandhapticsubjectiveverticalrevealtheroleofproprioceptivevestibularpriorsinchilddevelopment
_version_ 1726010543762833408