Vision-based speedometer regulates human walking.

iScience

NTT Communication Science Laboratories, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation, 3-1 Morinosato-Wakamiya, Atsugishi 243-0198, Kanagawa, Japan.

Published: December 2021

Can we recover self-motion from vision? This basic issue remains unsolved since, while the human visual system is known to estimate the of self-motion from optic flow, it remains unclear whether it also estimates the . Importantly, the latter requires disentangling self-motion speed and depths of objects in the scene as retinal velocity depends on both. Here we show that our automatic regulator of walking speed based on vision, which estimates and maintains the speed to its preferred range by adjusting stride length, is robust to changes in the depths. The robustness was not explained by temporal-frequency-based speed coding previously suggested to underlie depth-invariant object-motion perception. Meanwhile, it broke down, not only when the interocular distance was virtually manipulated but also when monocular depth cues were deceptive. These observations suggest that our visuomotor system embeds a speedometer that calculates self-motion speed from vision by integrating monocular/binocular depth and motion cues.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8605357PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2021.103390DOI Listing

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