What is it about?
Our ability to perceive what is truly vertical is crucial. Without it, we would struggle to perform simple tasks such as holding a cup of coffee without spilling it and maintaining appropriate body posture. Now, an international team of scientists from Japan, Canada and Germany have discovered a new situation from our everyday environment where this ability is compromised - when our body pitches (body pitch) and moves at the same time (body motion).
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Why is it important?
"Unlike typical studies of this kind, which happen in well-controlled laboratories, our team traveled to Hong Kong to conduct field research on the world-renowned Peak Tram," said Dr Chia-huei Tseng, who led the research and is associate professor at Tohoku University's Research Institute of Electrical Communication (RIEC). "We performed experiments on hundreds of commuters making their way up Hong Kong's highest hill, Victoria Peak." Although body pitch and body motion have been studied in previous studies, the phenomena were isolated. This study combined both aspects to determine a new situation where verticality becomes distorted. The team enlisted the help of an architect to build a device that participants could hold to indicate their perceived verticality (i.e., subjective haptic vertical or SHV). In most laboratory setting, humans are capable of perceiving SHV with an error of less than 1 degree. However, when measurements were taken on the moving Peak Tram, a misjudgment of 10 degrees was observed, something never previously reported. To investigate the possible sources of errors, the researchers devised additional experiments. First, they had participants close their eyes to rule out visual influences. Then, to eliminate the effects of the vestibular system - the sensory system that creates a sense of balance and spatial orientation - they inserted a back wedge between the participants and their chairs. None of these alternations had much bearing on diminishing the SHV error, ruling out visual and vestibular systems as the primary cause. The team then turned their attention to motion. They re-created a motion-free seating inclination with a dental chair. Changing the body pitch alone did not create any SHV error. Additionally, they ran their tests on Hong Kong's Ding Ding Tram, which runs at similar speeds to the Peak Tram but on a relatively flat surface. In both situations, no bias was detected. Psychology Professor Kenzo Sakurai from Tohoku Gakuin University, an expert on self-motion and co-author of the study, points out what a major discovery their findings are. "The failure to accurately sense our body orientation relative to gravity may result in inappropriate movements or falls, as well as impair daily functions such as walking, climbing a staircase, and carrying a tray. In specialized tasks such as driving a car or piloting a plane, this failure could be disastrous."
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This page is a summary of: Body Pitch Together With Translational Body Motion Biases the Subjective Haptic Vertical, Multisensory Research, December 2022, Brill,
DOI: 10.1163/22134808-bja10086.
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