Flanagan J R, Beltzner M A
Department of Psychology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 3N6, Canada.
Nat Neurosci. 2000 Jul;3(7):737-41. doi: 10.1038/76701.
The smaller of two equally weighted objects is judged to be heavier when lifted. Here we disproved a leading hypothesis that this size-weight illusion is caused by a mismatch between predicted and actual sensory feedback. We showed that when subjects repeatedly lifted equally heavy large and small objects in alternation, they learned to scale their fingertip forces precisely for the true object weights and thus exhibited accurate sensorimotor prediction. The size-weight illusion nevertheless persisted, suggesting that the illusion can be caused by high-level cognitive and perceptual factors and indicating that the sensorimotor system can operate independently of the cognitive/perceptual system.
当提起两个重量相等的物体时,较小的那个会被判断为更重。在这里,我们反驳了一个主流假设,即这种大小-重量错觉是由预测的和实际的感觉反馈之间的不匹配所导致的。我们发现,当受试者反复交替提起同样重的大、小物体时,他们学会了根据物体的真实重量精确地调整指尖的力量,从而表现出准确的感觉运动预测。然而,大小-重量错觉仍然存在,这表明这种错觉可能是由高级认知和感知因素引起的,并表明感觉运动系统可以独立于认知/感知系统运行。