Spinozzi Giovanna, De Lillo Carlo, Truppa Valentina, Castorina Giulia
Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, National Research Council, Rome, Italy.
J Comp Psychol. 2009 Feb;123(1):56-68. doi: 10.1037/a0012674.
Recent experimental results suggest that human and nonhuman primates differ in how they process visual information to assemble component parts into global shapes. To assess whether some of the observed differences in perceptual grouping could be accounted for by the prevalence of different grouping factors in different species, we carried out 2 experiments designed to evaluate the relative use of proximity, similarity of shape, and orientation as grouping cues in humans (Homo sapiens) and capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella). Both species showed similarly high levels of accuracy using proximity as a cue. Moreover, for both species, grouping by orientation similarity produced a lower level of performance than grouping by proximity. Differences emerged with respect to the use of shape similarity as a cue. In humans, grouping by shape similarity also proved less effective than grouping by proximity but the same was not observed in capuchins. These results suggest that there may be subtle differences between humans and capuchin monkeys in the weighting assigned to different grouping cues that may affect the way in which they combine local features into global shapes.
最近的实验结果表明,人类和非人类灵长类动物在处理视觉信息以将组成部分组合成整体形状的方式上存在差异。为了评估观察到的一些感知分组差异是否可以由不同物种中不同分组因素的普遍性来解释,我们进行了两项实验,旨在评估接近性、形状相似性和方向作为人类(智人)和卷尾猴(僧帽猴)分组线索的相对使用情况。两个物种在使用接近性作为线索时都表现出相似的高准确率。此外,对于两个物种来说,按方向相似性分组产生的表现水平低于按接近性分组。在使用形状相似性作为线索方面出现了差异。在人类中,按形状相似性分组也被证明不如按接近性分组有效,但在卷尾猴中未观察到同样的情况。这些结果表明,人类和卷尾猴在分配给不同分组线索的权重上可能存在细微差异,这可能会影响它们将局部特征组合成整体形状的方式。