Troje Nikolaus F, Westhoff Cord, Lavrov Mikhail
Ruhr-Universität, Bochum, Germany.
Percept Psychophys. 2005 May;67(4):667-75. doi: 10.3758/bf03193523.
Human observers are able to identify a person based on his or her gait. However, little is known about the underlying mechanisms and the kind of information used to accomplish such a task. In this study, participants learned to discriminate seven male walkers shown as point-light displays from frontal, half-profile, or profile view. The displays were gradually normalized with respect to size, shape, and walking frequency, and identification performance was measured. All observers quickly learned to discriminate the walkers, but there was an overall advantage in favor of the frontal view. No effect of size normalization was found, but performance deteriorated when shape or walking frequency was normalized. Presenting the walkers from novel viewpoints resulted in a further decrease in performance. However, even after applying all normalization steps and rotating the walker by 90 degrees, recognition performance was still nearly three times higher than chance level.
人类观察者能够根据一个人的步态识别其身份。然而,对于完成这项任务所依据的潜在机制以及所使用的信息种类,我们却知之甚少。在本研究中,参与者学习从正面、半侧面或侧面视角区分以点光显示呈现的七名男性步行者。这些显示在大小、形状和步行频率方面逐渐标准化,并对识别性能进行了测量。所有观察者都很快学会了区分这些步行者,但总体上正面视角具有优势。未发现大小标准化的影响,但当形状或步行频率标准化时,性能会下降。从新的视角呈现步行者会导致性能进一步下降。然而,即使应用了所有标准化步骤并将步行者旋转90度,识别性能仍几乎比随机水平高出近三倍。