DeLucia P R
Department of Psychology, Texas Tech University, Lubbock 79409-2051, USA.
Percept Psychophys. 1999 Aug;61(6):1168-77. doi: 10.3758/bf03207621.
With computer simulations of self-motion, participants approached a floating object and tried to "jump" over it without collision. Participants "jumped" significantly later over small objects than they did over larger objects. This occurred when the displays were viewed monocularly or binocularly, a finding that suggests that such size-arrival effects (DeLucia & Warren, 1994) were not due to a conflict between monocular and binocular cues to time-to-contact (TTC) information (Tresilian, 1994, 1995). Moreover, the results further suggest that size-arrival effects are not due to irregularities in TTC information that can occur from computer aliasing and that the latter does not always affect TTC estimation; visual information used in such judgments does not seem to be extracted on a frame-by-frame basis.
通过自我运动的计算机模拟,参与者靠近一个漂浮物体,并试图在不碰撞的情况下“跳过”它。与较大物体相比,参与者明显更晚“跳过”小物体。当单眼或双眼观察显示器时,都会出现这种情况,这一发现表明,这种大小到达效应(DeLucia和Warren,1994年)并非由于单眼和双眼接触时间(TTC)信息线索之间的冲突(Tresilian,1994年,1995年)。此外,结果进一步表明,大小到达效应并非由于计算机混叠可能导致的TTC信息不规则性,并且后者并不总是影响TTC估计;此类判断中使用的视觉信息似乎不是逐帧提取的。