Ross John, Ma-Wyatt Anna
School of Psychology, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, Western Australia 6009, Australia.
Nat Neurosci. 2004 Jan;7(1):65-9. doi: 10.1038/nn1163. Epub 2003 Dec 7.
People make saccades--rapid eye movements to a new fixation--approximately three times per second. This would seemingly disrupt perceptual continuity, yet our brains construct a coherent, stable view of the world from these successive fixations. There is conflicting evidence regarding the effects of saccades on perceptual continuity: some studies report that they are disruptive, with little information carryover between saccades; others report that carryover is substantial. Here we show that saccades actively contribute to perceptual continuity in humans in two different ways. When bistable stimuli are presented intermittently, saccades executed during the blank interval shorten the duration of states of ambiguous figures, indicating that saccades can erase immediately past perceptual states. On the other hand, they prolong the McCollough effect, indicating that saccades strengthen learned contingencies. Our results indicate that saccades help, rather than hinder, perceptual continuity.
人们每秒会进行大约三次扫视——即眼睛快速移动到新的注视点。这似乎会扰乱感知的连续性,但我们的大脑却能从这些连续的注视中构建出一个连贯、稳定的世界视图。关于扫视对感知连续性的影响,存在相互矛盾的证据:一些研究报告称扫视具有干扰性,扫视之间几乎没有信息传递;另一些研究则报告称信息传递相当可观。在这里,我们表明扫视以两种不同方式积极地促进了人类的感知连续性。当间歇性地呈现双稳态刺激时,在空白间隔期间执行的扫视会缩短模糊图形状态的持续时间,这表明扫视可以消除刚过去的感知状态。另一方面,扫视会延长麦考勒效应,这表明扫视会加强习得的关联性。我们的结果表明,扫视有助于而非阻碍感知的连续性。