de Grave Denise D J, Smeets Jeroen B J, Brenner Eli
Department of Neurosciences, Erasmus Universiteit, 3000 DR, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Exp Brain Res. 2006 Oct;175(1):177-82. doi: 10.1007/s00221-006-0536-1. Epub 2006 May 30.
In the Brentano version of the Müller-Lyer illusion one part looks longer and the other looks shorter than it really is. We asked participants to make saccadic eye movements along these parts of the figure and between positions on the figure and a position outside the illusion. By showing that saccades from outside the figure are not influenced by the illusion, we demonstrate that the reason that saccades along the figure are influenced is that the incorrectly judged length is used to plan the amplitude of the saccade. This finding contradicts several current views on the use of visual information for action. We conclude that actions are influenced by visual illusions, but that such influences are only apparent if the action is guided by the attribute that is fooled by the illusion.
在布伦塔诺版的缪勒-莱尔错觉中,其中一部分看起来比实际更长,而另一部分看起来比实际更短。我们要求参与者沿着图形的这些部分以及图形上的位置与错觉外的一个位置之间进行快速眼动。通过表明从图形外进行的扫视不受错觉影响,我们证明了沿着图形进行的扫视受到影响的原因是错误判断的长度被用于规划扫视的幅度。这一发现与当前关于视觉信息用于行动的几种观点相矛盾。我们得出结论,行动会受到视觉错觉的影响,但只有当行动由被错觉误导的属性引导时,这种影响才会显现出来。