Harris Julie M, Drga Vit F
School of Psychology, University of St. Andrews, St. Mary's College, South Street, St. Andrews, Fife, Scotland, KY16 9JP, UK.
Nat Neurosci. 2005 Feb;8(2):229-33. doi: 10.1038/nn1389. Epub 2005 Jan 23.
The eyes receive slightly different views of the world, and the differences between their images (binocular disparity) are used to see depth. Several authors have suggested how the brain could exploit this information for three-dimensional (3D) motion perception, but here we consider a simpler strategy. Visual direction is the angle between the direction of an object and the direction that an observer faces. Here we describe human behavioral experiments in which observers use visual direction, rather than binocular information, to estimate an object's 3D motion even though this causes them to make systematic errors. This suggests that recent models of binocular 3D motion perception may not reflect the strategies that human observers actually use.
两只眼睛接收到的关于世界的视图略有不同,它们图像之间的差异(双眼视差)被用于感知深度。几位作者已经提出了大脑如何利用这些信息进行三维(3D)运动感知,但在这里我们考虑一种更简单的策略。视觉方向是物体方向与观察者所面对方向之间的夹角。在这里,我们描述了人类行为实验,在这些实验中,观察者使用视觉方向而非双眼信息来估计物体的3D运动,尽管这会导致他们出现系统性误差。这表明,最近的双眼3D运动感知模型可能没有反映出人类观察者实际使用的策略。