• DocumentCode
    41443
  • Title

    Modeling Human Control of Self-Motion Direction With Optic Flow and Vestibular Motion

  • Author

    Zaal, Peter M. T. ; Nieuwenhuizen, Frank M. ; van Paassen, Marinus M. ; Mulder, Max

  • Author_Institution
    Fac. of Aerosp. Eng., Delft Univ. of Technol. (TU Delft), Delft, Netherlands
  • Volume
    43
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    Apr-13
  • Firstpage
    544
  • Lastpage
    556
  • Abstract
    In this paper, we investigate the effects of visual and motion stimuli on the manual control of one´s direction of self-motion. In a flight simulator, subjects conducted an active target-following disturbance-rejection task, using a compensatory display. Simulating a vehicular control task, the direction of vehicular motion was shown on the outside visual display in two ways: an explicit presentation using a symbol and an implicit presentation, namely, through the focus of radial outflow that emerges from optic flow. In addition, the effects of the relative strength of congruent vestibular motion cues were investigated. The dynamic properties of human visual and vestibular motion perception paths were modeled using a control-theoretical approach. As expected, improved tracking performance was found for the configurations that explicitly showed the direction of self-motion. The human visual time delay increased with approximately 150 ms for the optic flow conditions, relative to explicit presentations. Vestibular motion, providing higher order information on the direction of self-motion, allowed subjects to partially compensate for this visual perception delay, improving performance. Parameter estimates of the operator control model show that, with vestibular motion, the visual feedback becomes stronger, indicating that operators are more confident to act on optic flow information when congruent vestibular motion cues are present.
  • Keywords
    aerospace simulation; aircraft displays; delays; human computer interaction; image motion analysis; image sequences; motion control; parameter estimation; visual perception; active target-following disturbance-rejection task; compensatory display; congruent vestibular motion cues; control-theoretical approach; flight simulator; human control modeling; human visual time delay; motion stimulus; operator control model; optic flow information; parameter estimation; radial outflow; self-motion direction control; tracking performance improvement; vehicular control; vestibular motion perception paths; visual display; visual feedback; visual perception delay; visual stimulus; Cameras; Dynamics; Humans; Optical feedback; Vehicle dynamics; Vehicles; Visualization; Active psychophysics; cybernetics; manual control; optic flow; vision;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Cybernetics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    2168-2267
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TSMCB.2012.2212188
  • Filename
    6298973