Zanker Johannes M, Doyle Melanie, Robin Walker
Department of Psychology, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX, UK.
Perception. 2003;32(9):1037-49. doi: 10.1068/p5128.
It has been the matter of some debate why we can experience vivid dynamic illusions when looking at static pictures composed from simple black and white patterns. The impression of illusory motion is particularly strong when viewing some of the works of 'Op Artists, such as Bridget Riley's painting Fall. Explanations of the illusory motion have ranged from retinal to cortical mechanisms, and an important role has been attributed to eye movements. To assess the possible contribution of eye movements to the illusory-motion percept we studied the strength of the illusion under different viewing conditions, and analysed the gaze stability of observers viewing the Riley painting and control patterns that do not produce the illusion. Whereas the illusion was reduced, but not abolished, when watching the painting through a pinhole, which reduces the effects of accommodation, it was not perceived in flash afterimages, suggesting an important role for eye movements in generating the illusion for this image. Recordings of eye movements revealed an abundance of small involuntary saccades when looking at the Riley pattern, despite the fact that gaze was kept within the dedicated fixation region. The frequency and particular characteristics of these rapid eye movements can vary considerably between different observers, but, although there was a tendency for gaze stability to deteriorate while viewing a Riley painting, there was no significant difference in saccade frequency between the stimulus and control patterns. Theoretical considerations indicate that such small image displacements can generate patterns of motion signals in a motion-detector network, which may serve as a simple and sufficient, but not necessarily exclusive, explanation for the illusion. Why such image displacements lead to perceptual results with a group of Op Art and similar patterns, but remain invisible for other stimuli, is discussed.
为何我们在观看由简单黑白图案构成的静态图片时能够体验到生动的动态错觉,这一直是个颇具争议的问题。当观看一些“欧普艺术家”的作品时,比如布里奇特·赖利的画作《秋天》,虚幻运动的印象尤为强烈。对于这种虚幻运动的解释涵盖了从视网膜到皮层的机制,并且眼球运动被认为起着重要作用。为了评估眼球运动对虚幻运动感知可能产生的影响,我们研究了在不同观看条件下错觉的强度,并分析了观看赖利画作以及不会产生错觉的对照图案时观察者的注视稳定性。通过针孔观看画作时,由于减少了调节作用,错觉虽有所减弱但并未消除;而在闪光后像中则无法感知到错觉,这表明眼球运动在产生此图像的错觉中起着重要作用。眼球运动记录显示,观看赖利图案时会出现大量微小的非自主性扫视,尽管注视保持在专门的注视区域内。这些快速眼球运动的频率和具体特征在不同观察者之间可能有很大差异,但是,尽管观看赖利画作时注视稳定性有变差的趋势,但刺激图案和对照图案之间的扫视频率并无显著差异。理论思考表明,这种微小的图像位移能够在运动检测网络中产生运动信号模式,这可能是对该错觉的一种简单而充分但不一定唯一的解释。文中还讨论了为何这种图像位移会导致对一组欧普艺术及类似图案产生感知结果,而对其他刺激却不可见。