Woods Adam J, Philbeck John W, Danoff Jerome V
Department of Psychology, The George Washington University, 2125 G st., NW, Washington, DC 20052, USA.
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform. 2009 Aug;35(4):1104-17. doi: 10.1037/a0013622.
D. R. Proffitt and colleagues (e. g., D. R. Proffitt, J. Stefanucci, T. Banton, & W. Epstein, 2003) have suggested that objects appear farther away if more effort is required to act upon them (e.g., by having to throw a ball). The authors attempted to replicate several findings supporting this view but found no effort-related effects in a variety of conditions differing in environment, type of effort, and intention to act. Although they did find an effect of effort on verbal reports when participants were instructed to take into account nonvisual (cognitive) factors, no effort-related effect was found under apparent- and objective-distance instruction types. The authors' interpretation is that in the paradigms tested, effort manipulations are prone to influencing response calibration because they encourage participants to take nonperceptual connotations of distance into account while leaving perceived distance itself unaffected. This in no way rules out the possibility that effort influences perception in other contexts, but it does focus attention on the role of response calibration in any verbal distance estimation task.
D. R. 普罗菲特及其同事(例如,D. R. 普罗菲特、J. 斯特凡努奇、T. 班顿和W. 爱泼斯坦,2003年)提出,如果对物体采取行动需要付出更多努力(例如,必须扔球),那么物体看起来会更远。作者试图重复几项支持这一观点的研究结果,但在环境、努力类型和行动意图不同的各种条件下,均未发现与努力相关的效应。尽管当参与者被指示考虑非视觉(认知)因素时,他们确实发现了努力对言语报告的影响,但在视距和客观距离指示类型下,未发现与努力相关的效应。作者的解释是,在所测试的范式中,努力操纵容易影响反应校准,因为它们鼓励参与者考虑距离的非感知内涵,而不会影响实际感知到的距离本身。这绝不排除努力在其他情境中影响感知的可能性,但它确实将注意力集中在任何言语距离估计任务中反应校准的作用上。