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Gravity Shapes Human Visual Perception of Biological Motion
 
Author: Dr. WANG Ying      Update time: 2022/05/30
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To what extent has the Earth’s gravity shaped our cognitive and brain functions? Utilizing spaceflight and its ground-based analog, a new study shows that the human brain relies on bodily gravitational signals transmitted from vestibular cortex to sustain its selective sensitivity to visual biological motion (BM).

Fig. 1 Schematic schedules of the space experiment (upper right panel), the ground-based control experiments (middle panel), and the 6° head-down tilt bed rest (HDTBR) space analog experiment (lower left panel). Image by Dr. WANG Ying.

Led by Dr. JIANG Yi from the Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Dr. CHEN Shanguang from the China Astronaut Research and Training Center, a collaborative research team investigated how microgravity and simulated microgravity exposure altered visual BM perception and examined the underlying neural processes.

On Earth, the movement of biological entities, including our own, is constrained by gravity. Humans are endowed with extraordinary abilities to detect and perceive gravity-compatible visual BM stimuli but are less sensitive to their inverted counterparts. Such orientation-dependent perceptual sensitivity allows us to react selectively to life motion signals in the environment, which may confer an evolutionary advantage. However, the origin of such selective perceptual sensitivity remains to be determined.

Based on findings from a space experiment, two ground-based control experiments, and a spaceflight analog experiment, the current study reveals that the orientation-dependent sensitivity in BM perception relies on online neural computation of gravity cues from the visual and vestibular modalities.

In the space experiment, after being exposed to microgravity in space for about one week, the astronauts consistently exhibited reduced inversion effects in BM perception (Fig. 2, a & b). Such changes arose from microgravity exposure rather than non-gravity-related factors (i.e., test environment and practice effect), as revealed by two ground-based control experiments (Fig. 2, c & d). “Living in the particular gravity environment (1g) of the Earth is essential to sustaining our orientation-dependent sensitivity to life motion signals,” said Dr. WANG Ying, first author of the study.

Fig. 2 Experimental design (a) and results for the space experiment (b) and the ground-based control experiments (c & d). BMIE: the normalized BM inversion effect (BMIE); BMUpr & BMInv: task performances for the upright and inverted conditions. Image by Dr. WANG Ying.

Consistent with the space experiment, a 45-day microgravity analog using the -6° head-down-tilt bedrest technique reduced the BM perceptual inversion effect. It also induced attenuated orientation dependence in neural responses to BM as measured by functional magnetic resonance imaging. More importantly, the perceptual change in BM perception is significantly associated with strengthened resting-state functional connectivity between brain areas dedicated to visual BM processing and vestibular gravity estimation. This finding indicates that visuo-vestibular interaction contributes to the orientation-dependent visual perception of BM signals.

This study provides fresh insight into how human brains use gravity cues as an embodied constraint to facilitate life motion perception in different gravity environments, paving the way for further exploration of the adaptive plasticity of the human perceptual system in space.

The work has been published in Nature Communications. It was funded by the Ministry of Science and Technology of China, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Wang, Y., Zhang, X., Wang, C., Huang, W., Xu, Q., Liu, D., Zhou, W., Chen, S., & Jiang, Y. (2022). Modulation of biological motion perception in humans by gravity. Nature Communications, 13, 2765.

LIU Chen
Institute of Psychology
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Beijing 100101, China.
E-mail: liuc@psych.ac.cn

 

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