Nature Neuroscience
1, 647 - 649 (1998)
doi:10.1038/3646
Perception of heading is a brain in the neckWilliam H. Warren
William H. Warren is at the Department of Cognitive
and Linguistic Sciences, Box 1978, Brown University,
Providence, Rhode Island 02912, USA.
Bill Warren@brown.edu
How can you see where you are heading, given that your eyes and head can
move relative to your body? Extra-retinal information about neck movements
is part of the answer.
|