Crane Lab
Motion Perception & Spatial Orientation
The vestibular system senses motion using the semicircular canal and otolith organs in the inner ear. The system guides control of eye movement, posture, and equilibrium. Dizziness and vertigo, the most common clinical manifestations of the vestibular system, are disorders of motion perception. Current understanding of the vestibular system is centered on control of eye movement and posture, with very little understood about perception especially as it pertains to clinical symptoms. Research in our laboratory aims to better understand human motion perception and spatial orientation using psychophysical and engineering techniques to study head motion and its interaction with visual stimuli. Current studies involve healthy individuals, patients with vestibular hypofunction, and patients with dizziness symptoms related to common central integration disorders such as migraine associated vertigo.
Benjamin T. Crane, M.D., Ph.D.
Principal Investigator
- Hearing Loss From a Retained Dental Needle Traversing the Carotid Canal and Cochlea.; Otology & neurotology : official publication of the American Otological Society, American Neurotology Society [and] European Academy of Otology and Neurotology. 2024 Jul 03.
- Psychometrics of inertial heading perception.; Journal of vestibular research : equilibrium & orientation. 2024 Apr 16.
- Effect of timing delay between visual and vestibular stimuli on heading perception.; Journal of neurophysiology. 2021 Jun 30.
- A Protocol for Imaging of Cochlear Implantation.; Otology & neurotology : official publication of the American Otological Society, American Neurotology Society [and] European Academy of Otology and Neurotology. 2021 May 10.
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Motion Perception & Spatial Orientation Lab
MC 6-7422
601 Elmwood Ave,
Rochester, NY 14642