Swanston M T, Wade N J, Ono H, Shibuta K
Dundee Institute of Technology, Scotland.
Percept Psychophys. 1992 Dec;52(6):705-13. doi: 10.3758/bf03211707.
A horizontally moving target was followed by rotation of the eyes alone or by a lateral movement of the head. These movements resulted in the retinal displacement of a vertically moving target from its perceived path, the amplitude of which was determined by the phase and amplitude of the object motion and of the eye or head movements. In two experiments, we tested the prediction from our model of spatial motion (Swanston, Wade, & Day, 1987) that perceived distance interacts with compensation for head movements, but not with compensation for eye movements with respect to a stationary head. In both experiments, when the vertically moving target was seen at a distance different from its physical distance, its perceived path was displaced relative to that seen when there was no error in perceived distance, or when it was pursued by eye movements alone. In a third experiment, simultaneous measurements of eye and head position during lateral head movements showed that errors in fixation were not sufficient to require modification of the retinal paths determined by the geometry of the observation conditions in Experiments 1 and 2.
一个水平移动的目标可以仅通过眼睛转动或头部的横向移动来跟踪。这些运动会导致垂直移动目标在视网膜上偏离其感知路径,其幅度由物体运动以及眼睛或头部运动的相位和幅度决定。在两个实验中,我们测试了我们的空间运动模型(Swanston、Wade和Day,1987)的预测,即感知距离与头部运动补偿相互作用,但与静止头部的眼睛运动补偿无关。在这两个实验中,当垂直移动目标的观察距离与其实际距离不同时,其感知路径相对于感知距离无误差或仅通过眼睛运动跟踪目标时所看到的路径发生了位移。在第三个实验中,对横向头部运动期间眼睛和头部位置的同步测量表明,注视误差不足以要求修改实验1和实验2中由观察条件的几何结构所确定的视网膜路径。