Chaudhury Sidhartha, Eisinger Jane M, Hao Lei, Hicks John, Chivukula Raghu, Turano Kathleen A
Lions Vision Center, Wilmer Eye Institute, The Johns Hopkins University, 550 North Broadway, 6th Floor, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2004 Dec;159(3):360-9. doi: 10.1007/s00221-004-1961-7. Epub 2004 Jul 9.
In this study we investigated whether a visual illusion located in far space alters a person's open-loop, target-directed walking path in the same manner as it alters the perception of the target's position. Through the use of immersive VR the subject was able to walk physically to the location of a target embedded in a scene that was manipulated to create a visual illusion, known as the induced Roelofs effect. This illusion has been shown to alter the perception of a target's position. The experiment consisted of two tasks: a perception task and an action task. In the perception task, subjects viewed the scene for 1 s, it disappeared, and they were to report the target's location verbally. The results showed that the visual illusion altered the reported positions in all but one subject. In the action task, subjects viewed the scene for 1 s, it disappeared, and the subjects were asked to walk to the target's location. The results showed that the illusion significantly altered the walking paths of most of the women and less than half of the men. A significant gender effect was observed; women's walking paths deviated, on average, by 7.1 degrees and men's, by only 2.0 degrees . These results indicate that action tasks in far space are susceptible to the effects of visual illusions, unlike the action tasks in near space that reportedly have been resistant to them. Furthermore, the significant gender effect suggests that men and women either have different strategies and/or employ different mechanisms when executing a visually guided task in far space.
在本研究中,我们调查了位于远处空间的视觉错觉是否会以与改变目标位置感知相同的方式改变人的开环、目标导向行走路径。通过使用沉浸式虚拟现实技术,受试者能够实际走到嵌入场景中的目标位置,该场景经过操控以产生一种视觉错觉,即诱发的罗洛夫斯效应。这种错觉已被证明会改变对目标位置的感知。实验包括两项任务:感知任务和动作任务。在感知任务中,受试者观看场景1秒,场景消失后,他们要口头报告目标的位置。结果显示,除一名受试者外,视觉错觉改变了所有受试者报告的位置。在动作任务中,受试者观看场景1秒,场景消失后,要求他们走到目标位置。结果显示,这种错觉显著改变了大多数女性以及不到一半男性的行走路径。观察到显著的性别效应;女性的行走路径平均偏差7.1度,男性仅为2.0度。这些结果表明,与据报道对视觉错觉有抗性的近空间动作任务不同,远空间的动作任务易受视觉错觉的影响。此外,显著的性别效应表明,男性和女性在执行远空间视觉引导任务时,要么有不同的策略,要么采用不同的机制。