Visuomotor adaptation without vision?

FH Durgin, A Pelah - Experimental Brain Research, 1999 - Springer
In 1995, an aftereffect following treadmill running was described, in which people would
inadvertently advance when attempting to run in place on solid ground with their eyes …

Self-motion perception during locomotor recalibration: more than meets the eye.

FH Durgin, A Pelah, LF Fox, J Lewis… - Journal of …, 2005 - psycnet.apa.org
Do locomotor aftereffects depend specifically on visual feedback? In 7 experiments, 116
college students were tested, with closed eyes, at stationary running or at walking to a …

The reference frame of the motion aftereffect is retinotopic

T Knapen, M Rolfs, P Cavanagh - Journal of vision, 2009 - jov.arvojournals.org
Although eye-, head-and body-movements can produce large-scale translations of the
visual input on the retina, perception is notable for its spatiotemporal continuity. The visual …

Formation of a long-term memory for visuomotor adaptation following only a few trials of practice

DM Huberdeau, AM Haith… - Journal of …, 2015 - journals.physiology.org
The term savings refers to faster motor adaptation upon reexposure to a previously
experienced perturbation, a phenomenon thought to reflect the existence of a long-term …

Matching visual and nonvisual signals: evidence for a mechanism to discount optic flow during locomotion

A Thurrell, A Pelah - Human vision and electronic imaging X, 2005 - spiedigitallibrary.org
We report on recent experiments to investigate the Arthrovisual Locomotor Effect (ALE), a
mechanism based on non-visual signals postulated to discount or remove the self …

[PDF][PDF] Perceptuomotor adaptation: More than meets the eye

FH Durgin, LF Fox, J Lewis… - Psychonomic …, 2002 - durginlab.domains.swarthmore.edu
3. Pelah & Barlow (1996) claimed that the FLOW effect was much stronger when adapted
with eyes open. Fox & Durgin (VSS 2002) showed that the DRIFT effect could be measured …

Obstacle avoidance during human walking: learning rate and cross‐modal transfer

T Erni, V Dietz - The Journal of physiology, 2001 - Wiley Online Library
1 The aim of this study was to investigate the significance of specific afferent information
during motor learning. Blindfolded subjects stepped over an obstacle on a treadmill while …

Unintentional modulations of human gait by optical flow

J Pailhous, AM Ferrandez, M Flückiger… - Behavioural brain …, 1990 - Elsevier
Visual whole-field motion is known to trigger motor responses which minimize retinal slip
(VOR, OKN and control of balance). In locomotion, however, the retinal slip is utilized to …

Adaptation of movement endpoints to perturbations of visual feedback

JJ van den Dobbelsteen, E Brenner… - Experimental brain …, 2003 - Springer
We investigated the extent to which humans can quickly adapt their goal-directed arm
movements to perturbed feedback. We predicted that the magnitude of adaptation to a …

The direction of walking—but not throwing or kicking—is adapted by optic flow

H Bruggeman, WH Warren - Psychological Science, 2010 - journals.sagepub.com
Optic flow is known to adapt the direction of walking, but the locus of adaptation remains
unknown. The effect could be due to realignment of anatomical eye, head, trunk, and leg …