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[Visual illusions during the electrical stimulation of the labyrinth]. / Zritel'nye illiuzii pri élektricheskoi stimuliatsii labirinta.
Neirofiziologiia ; 23(3): 321-7, 1991.
Article in Ru | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1881489
ABSTRACT
Transcutaneous electrical stimulation of the labyrinth induced apparent motion of a stationary light source in darkness in normal subjects. This effect is similar to the oculogyric illusion induced by rotatory vestibular stimulation. Monaural anodal stimulation of the right labyrinth evoked apparent movement of the target to the left, whereas cathodal stimulation induced opposite illusion. The threshold current was 0.35-0.6 mA. Binaural bipolar stimuli induced illusory target motion directed to the side of the cathode, the threshold decreased 1.5-2.5 times. Binaural monopolar stimulation induced vertical apparent displacement of a target, the threshold being 1.4-3.0 mA. The amplitude and velocity of illusory target motion increased with current. The subject eyes began to move with much higher currents than those necessary for illusory sensation. It is therefore suggested that the visual illusion is related not to vestibulo-visual interaction but to vestibular effects on the spatial perception system.
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Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Optical Illusions / Ear, Inner Limits: Humans Language: Ru Journal: Neirofiziologiia Year: 1991 Document type: Article
Search on Google
Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Optical Illusions / Ear, Inner Limits: Humans Language: Ru Journal: Neirofiziologiia Year: 1991 Document type: Article