Authors: Perez-Heydrich, Carlos | Pile, Macie | Padova, Dominic | Cevallos, Ashley | Newman, Phillip | McNamara, Timothy P. | Sayyid, Zahra N. | Agrawal, Yuri
Article Type:
Research Article
Abstract:
BACKGROUND: Patients with vestibular loss have reduced wayfinding ability, but the association between vestibular loss and impaired steering spatial navigation is unclear. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether vestibular loss is associated with reduced steering navigation performance in a virtual reality (VR) environment containing obstacles. METHODS: 17 ambulatory adults with vestibular loss were age/sex-matched to healthy controls. Participants traversed a VR hallway with obstacles, and their navigation performance was compared using metrics such as collisions, time, total distance travelled, and speed in single and multivariate analysis. RESULTS: In univariate analysis there was no significant difference in
…collisions between vestibular patients and controls (1.84 vs. 2.24, p = 0.974). However, vestibular patients took more time, longer routes, and had lower speeds to complete the task (56.9 vs. 43.9 seconds, p < 0.001; 23.1 vs. 22.0 meters, p = 0.0312; 0.417 vs. 0.544 m/s, p < 0.001). These results were confirmed in multivariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS: This study found that patients with vestibular loss displayed slower gait speeds and traveled longer distances, though did not make more collisions, during a VR steering navigation task. Beyond the known influence of vestibular function on gait speed, vestibular loss may also contribute to less efficient steering navigation through an obstacle-laden environment, through neural mechanisms that remain to be elucidated.
Show more
Keywords: Vestibular hypofunction, vestibular dysfunction, spatial navigation, virtual reality
DOI: 10.3233/VES-230065
Citation: Journal of Vestibular Research,
vol. 33, no. 6, pp. 377-383, 2023
Price: EUR 27.50