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Kapralos, B., Zikovitz, D., Jenkin, M. R., & Harris, L. R. 2004, May 8–11, Auditory cues in the perception of self motion. Paper presented at Audio Engineering Society 116th Convention, Berlin. 
Added by: Mark Grimshaw-Aagaard (21/05/2008, 16:50)   
Resource type: Proceedings Article
Peer reviewed
BibTeX citation key: Kapralos2004
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Categories: General
Keywords: Motion, Perception
Creators: Harris, Jenkin, Kapralos, Zikovitz
Publisher: Audio Engineering Society (Berlin)
Collection: Audio Engineering Society 116<sup>th</sup> Convention
Views: 16/693
Abstract
Despite its potential importance, few studies have methodically examined the role of auditory cues to the perception of self-motion. Here we describe a series of experiments that investigate the relative roles of various combinations of physical motion and decreasing sound source intensity cues to the perception of linear self-motion. Self-motion was simulated using either (i) physical motion only, (ii) moving audio-cues only, (iii) decreasing intensity cues, and (iv) physical motion coupled with moving audio-cues. In all conditions an over-estimation of self-motion of measures that varied systematically with the simulated acceleration. Of particular interest was that audio cues combined with physical motion cues resulted in more accurate estimates of self-motion than did either audio or physical motion cues in isolation.
Added by: Mark Grimshaw-Aagaard  
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