Tong Jianliang, Patel Saumil S, Bedell Harold E
College of Optometry, University of Houston, Houston, TX 77204-2020, USA.
Vision Res. 2006 Dec;46(26):4387-97. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2006.08.034.
The extent of perceived motion smear was compared for targets that underwent similar velocities of retinal image motion during the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) in the dark, the visually enhanced VOR (VVOR), VOR suppression, and fixation. Compared to the extent of perceived motion smear during fixation, observers reported significantly less smear when the target moved either in the same direction or against the direction of the head movement during the VVOR and VOR. We also confirmed a previous finding that perceived smear is attenuated asymmetrically during VOR suppression, with attenuation occurring primarily for targets that move against the direction of the observer's head motion. The results support the hypothesis that the visual system employs extra-retinal signals that accompany eye and head movements to reduce the perception of motion smear for targets that move physically in the opposite direction of eye and/or head movements.
在黑暗中进行前庭眼反射(VOR)、视觉增强的VOR(VVOR)、VOR抑制和注视时,对视网膜图像运动速度相似的目标,比较了感知到的运动模糊程度。与注视期间感知到的运动模糊程度相比,观察者报告称,在VVOR和VOR期间,当目标朝着与头部运动相同或相反的方向移动时,运动模糊明显减少。我们还证实了之前的一项发现,即在VOR抑制期间,感知到的模糊会不对称地减弱,主要是朝着与观察者头部运动方向相反移动的目标出现模糊减弱。这些结果支持了这样一种假设,即视觉系统利用伴随眼睛和头部运动的视网膜外信号,来减少在物理上朝着与眼睛和/或头部运动相反方向移动的目标的运动模糊感知。