Andersen George J, Enriquez AnnJudel
Department of Psychology, University of California-Riverside, Riverside, CA 95251, USA.
Psychol Aging. 2006 Mar;21(1):74-85. doi: 10.1037/0882-7974.21.1.74.
The authors examined age-related differences in the detection of collision events. Older and younger observers were presented with displays simulating approaching objects that would either collide or pass by the observer. In 4 experiments, the authors found that older observers, as compared with younger observers, had less sensitivity in detecting collisions with an increase in speed, at shorter display durations, and with longer time-to-contact conditions. Older observers also had greater difficulty when the scenario simulated observer motion, suggesting that older observers have difficulty discriminating object motion expansion from background expansion from observer motion. The results of these studies support the expansion sensitivity hypothesis-that age-related decrements in detecting collision events involving moving objects are the result of a decreased sensitivity to recover expansion information.
作者研究了碰撞事件检测中与年龄相关的差异。向年长和年轻的观察者展示模拟接近物体的显示屏,这些物体要么会与观察者碰撞,要么会从观察者身边经过。在4项实验中,作者发现,与年轻观察者相比,年长观察者在检测速度增加、显示持续时间较短以及接触时间较长情况下的碰撞时,敏感度较低。当场景模拟观察者运动时,年长观察者也有更大的困难,这表明年长观察者难以区分物体运动的扩展与观察者运动引起的背景扩展。这些研究结果支持扩展敏感度假说——即与年龄相关的在检测涉及移动物体的碰撞事件时的能力下降是对恢复扩展信息敏感度降低的结果。