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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 30, 2026

Using a Split-belt Treadmill to Evaluate Generalization of Human Locomotor Adaptation
08:04

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Published on: August 23, 2017

Treadmill experience alters treadmill effects on perceived visual motion.

Yoshiko Yabe1, Hama Watanabe, Gentaro Taga

  • 1Graduate School of Education, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan. yabe.yoshiko@kochi-tech.ac.jp

Plos One
|July 30, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Treadmill walking influences visual motion perception. Long-term treadmill runners show no bias, suggesting a unique locomotor-visual link formed from experience without optic flow.

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Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Perception Psychology
  • Biomechanics

Background:

  • Body movement information influences visual motion perception.
  • Treadmill walking can bias visual motion perception (treadmill capture).
  • Long-term treadmill experience alters treadmill capture effects.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Investigate mechanisms behind treadmill capture and long-term experience effects.
  • Examine how treadmill walking and experience influence visual directional discrimination.

Main Methods:

  • Two experiments were conducted with non-treadmill runners and treadmill runners.
  • Participants judged apparent motion direction of gratings under three conditions: treadmill walking, treadmill standing, and floor standing.
  • Visual directional discrimination was assessed.

Main Results:

  • Non-treadmill runners exhibited a downward bias only when walking on the treadmill.
  • Treadmill runners showed no downward bias in any condition.
  • Results indicate ongoing walking, not just awareness of the treadmill, influences perception in novices.

Conclusions:

  • Ongoing treadmill walking biases visual perception in non-runners.
  • Long-term treadmill runners develop a specific locomotor-visual linkage.
  • This linkage, formed without optic flow, alters perception of self-environment relationships.