Troje Nikolaus F, Westhoff Cord
Department of Psychology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario.
Curr Biol. 2006 Apr 18;16(8):821-4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2006.03.022.
If biological-motion point-light displays are presented upside down, adequate perception is strongly impaired. Reminiscent of the inversion effect in face recognition, it has been suggested that the inversion effect in biological motion is due to impaired configural processing in a highly trained expert system. Here, we present data that are incompatible with this view. We show that observers can readily retrieve information about direction from scrambled point-light displays of humans and animals. Even though all configural information is entirely disrupted, perception of these displays is still subject to a significant inversion effect. Inverting only parts of the display reveals that the information about direction, as well as the associated inversion effect, is entirely carried by the local motion of the feet. We interpret our findings in terms of a visual filter that is tuned to the characteristic motion of the limbs of an animal in locomotion and hypothesize that this mechanism serves as a general detection system for the presence of articulated terrestrial animals.
如果生物运动点光显示以倒置的方式呈现,充分的感知会受到严重损害。这类似于人脸识别中的倒置效应,有人认为生物运动中的倒置效应是由于在一个训练有素的专家系统中构型处理受损所致。在此,我们展示了与这一观点不相符的数据。我们表明,观察者能够轻松地从人类和动物的乱序点光显示中获取有关方向的信息。尽管所有构型信息都被完全打乱,但对这些显示的感知仍然会受到显著的倒置效应影响。仅将显示的部分进行倒置表明,有关方向的信息以及相关的倒置效应完全由脚部的局部运动携带。我们根据一个针对动物运动时肢体特征运动进行调谐的视觉过滤器来解释我们的发现,并推测这种机制作为一种通用的检测系统,用于检测有关节的陆生动物的存在。