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Gravity as a Strong Prior: Implications for Perception and Action
by
Jörges, Björn
, López-Moliner, Joan
in
Adaptation
/ Bayesian analysis
/ bayesian framework
/ Brain research
/ catching
/ Cognitive neuroscience
/ Gravetat
/ Gravity
/ gravity perception
/ Human performance
/ Neurociència cognitiva
/ Neuroscience
/ optic flow
/ Orientation behavior
/ Perception
/ Perceptions
/ perceptual adaptation
/ Realitat virtual
/ Space flight
/ strong prior
/ Virtual reality
/ Visual stimuli
2017
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Gravity as a Strong Prior: Implications for Perception and Action
by
Jörges, Björn
, López-Moliner, Joan
in
Adaptation
/ Bayesian analysis
/ bayesian framework
/ Brain research
/ catching
/ Cognitive neuroscience
/ Gravetat
/ Gravity
/ gravity perception
/ Human performance
/ Neurociència cognitiva
/ Neuroscience
/ optic flow
/ Orientation behavior
/ Perception
/ Perceptions
/ perceptual adaptation
/ Realitat virtual
/ Space flight
/ strong prior
/ Virtual reality
/ Visual stimuli
2017
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Do you wish to request the book?
Gravity as a Strong Prior: Implications for Perception and Action
by
Jörges, Björn
, López-Moliner, Joan
in
Adaptation
/ Bayesian analysis
/ bayesian framework
/ Brain research
/ catching
/ Cognitive neuroscience
/ Gravetat
/ Gravity
/ gravity perception
/ Human performance
/ Neurociència cognitiva
/ Neuroscience
/ optic flow
/ Orientation behavior
/ Perception
/ Perceptions
/ perceptual adaptation
/ Realitat virtual
/ Space flight
/ strong prior
/ Virtual reality
/ Visual stimuli
2017
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Gravity as a Strong Prior: Implications for Perception and Action
Journal Article
Gravity as a Strong Prior: Implications for Perception and Action
2017
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Overview
In the future, humans are likely to be exposed to environments with altered gravity conditions, be it only visually (Virtual and Augmented Reality), or visually and bodily (space travel). As visually and bodily perceived gravity as well as an interiorized representation of earth gravity are involved in a series of tasks, such as catching, grasping, body orientation estimation and spatial inferences, humans will need to adapt to these new gravity conditions. Performance under earth gravity discrepant conditions has been shown to be relatively poor, and few studies conducted in gravity adaptation are rather discouraging. Especially in VR on earth, conflicts between bodily and visual gravity cues seem to make a full adaptation to visually perceived earth-discrepant gravities nearly impossible, and even in space, when visual and bodily cues are congruent, adaptation is extremely slow. We invoke a Bayesian framework for gravity related perceptual processes, in which earth gravity holds the status of a so called \"strong prior\". As other strong priors, the gravity prior has developed through years and years of experience in an earth gravity environment. For this reason, the reliability of this representation is extremely high and overrules any sensory information to its contrary. While also other factors such as the multisensory nature of gravity perception need to be taken into account, we present the strong prior account as a unifying explanation for empirical results in gravity perception and adaptation to earth-discrepant gravities.
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