Cross-Modal Plasticity during Self-Motion Perception

Brain Sci. 2023 Oct 24;13(11):1504. doi: 10.3390/brainsci13111504.

Abstract

To maintain stable and coherent perception in an ever-changing environment, the brain needs to continuously and dynamically calibrate information from multiple sensory sources, using sensory and non-sensory information in a flexible manner. Here, we review how the vestibular and visual signals are recalibrated during self-motion perception. We illustrate two different types of recalibration: one long-term cross-modal (visual-vestibular) recalibration concerning how multisensory cues recalibrate over time in response to a constant cue discrepancy, and one rapid-term cross-modal (visual-vestibular) recalibration concerning how recent prior stimuli and choices differentially affect subsequent self-motion decisions. In addition, we highlight the neural substrates of long-term visual-vestibular recalibration, with profound differences observed in neuronal recalibration across multisensory cortical areas. We suggest that multisensory recalibration is a complex process in the brain, is modulated by many factors, and requires the coordination of many distinct cortical areas. We hope this review will shed some light on research into the neural circuits of visual-vestibular recalibration and help develop a more generalized theory for cross-modal plasticity.

Keywords: cross-modal; plasticity; self-motion; vestibular; visual.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by grants from the “Technology Innovation 2030—Major Projects” on Brain Science and Brain-Like Computing of the Ministry of Science and Technology of China (No. 2021ZD0202600), the National Basic Research Program of China (No. 32171034) to A.C, and the ISF-NSFC joint research program to A.C. (No. 32061143003), the Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project No. 2021SHZDZX to Muming Pu.