AUTHOR=Lyakhovetskii Vsevolod , Chetverikov Andrey , Zelenskaya Inna , Tomilovskaya Elena , Karpinskaia Valeriia TITLE=Perception of length and orientation in dry immersion JOURNAL=Frontiers in Neural Circuits VOLUME=17 YEAR=2023 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neural-circuits/articles/10.3389/fncir.2023.1157228 DOI=10.3389/fncir.2023.1157228 ISSN=1662-5110 ABSTRACT=Introduction

How does gravity (or lack thereof) affect sensory-motor processing? We analyze sensorimotor estimation dynamics for line segments with varying direction (orientation) in a 7-day dry immersion (DI), a ground-based model of gravitational unloading.

Methods

The measurements were carried out before the start of the DI, on the first, third, fifth and seventh days of the DI, and after its completion. At the memorization stage, the volunteers led the leading hand along the visible segment on a touchscreen display, and at the reproduction stage they repeated this movement on an empty screen. A control group followed the same procedure without DI.

Results

Both in the DI and control groups, when memorizing, the overall error in estimating the lengths and directions of the segments was small and did not have pronounced dynamics; when reproducing, an oblique effect (higher variability of responses to oblique orientations compared to cardinal ones) was obtained. We then separated biases (systematic error) and uncertainty (random error) in subjects’ responses. At the same time, two opposite trends were more pronounced in the DI group during the DI. On the one hand the cardinal bias (a repulsion of orientation estimates away from cardinal axes) and, to a small extent, the variability of direction estimates decreased. On the other hand, the overestimation bias in length estimates increased.

Discussion

Such error pattern strongly supports the hypotheses of the vector encoding, in which the direction and length of the planned movement are encoded independently of each other when the DI disrupts primarily the movement length encoding.