“…Our walking simulator uses a magnetic tracker (Blood, 1990) to measure location and orientation of the participant's head. This type of device, also used in biomechanics (Day, Dumas, & Murdoch, 1998), virtual reality (Livingston & State, 1997) and eye-tracking research (Caldwell, Berbaum, & Borah, 2000), is subject to environmental magnetic distortions that worsen with the distance between the magnetic transmitter and the magnetic sensor. Compensation for this distortion is required if measurements are to be taken from near the limits of the tracker's range or if the tracker is to be used in close proximity to large metallic objects (Nixon, McCallum, Fright, & Price, 1998).…”