Mather G, Radford K, West S
Laboratory of Experimental Psychology, University of Sussex, Brighton, U.K.
Proc Biol Sci. 1992 Aug 22;249(1325):149-55. doi: 10.1098/rspb.1992.0097.
Biological motion displays depict a moving human figure by means of just a few isolated points of light attached to the major joints of the body. Naive observers readily interpret the moving pattern of dots as representing a human figure, despite the complete absence of form cues. This paper reports a series of experiments which investigated the visual processes underlying the phenomenon. Results suggest that (i) the effect relies upon responses in low-level motion-detecting processes, which operate over short temporal and spatial intervals and respond to local modulations in image intensity; and (ii) the effect does not involve hierarchical visual analysis of motion components, nor does it require the presence of dots which move in rigid relation to each other. Instead, movements of the extremities are crucial. Data are inconsistent with current theoretical treatments.
生物运动显示通过附着在身体主要关节上的几个孤立光点来描绘一个移动的人体。尽管完全没有形状线索,但未经训练的观察者很容易将移动的点模式解释为代表一个人体。本文报告了一系列实验,这些实验研究了该现象背后的视觉过程。结果表明:(i)这种效应依赖于低水平运动检测过程中的反应,该过程在短时间和空间间隔内起作用,并对图像强度的局部调制做出反应;(ii)这种效应不涉及对运动成分的分层视觉分析,也不需要存在相互之间以刚性关系移动的点。相反,四肢的运动至关重要。数据与当前的理论处理不一致。