Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Tuebingen, 72076, Germany.
Brain Res. 2010 Nov 29;1362:48-55. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2010.09.036. Epub 2010 Sep 17.
Vision tends to dominate over touch in the majority of experimental situations, particularly when visual information is presented on, or near to, the body. We combined two visual dominance paradigms in order to investigate crossmodal interactions between vision and touch for stimuli on versus off the body: 1) The Colavita visual dominance effect, which has recently been extended to vision and touch, and 2) The rubber hand illusion, which has often been used to probe visuotactile interactions. Specifically, we investigated whether moving a visual stimulus off the participant's body would affect visual dominance, and how this dominance would be mediated by the presence/absence of a rubber hand (given the rubber hand illusion provides a way of extending the representation of one's own body in space). Participants made speeded detection/discrimination responses to a random sequence of visual-only, tactile-only, and visuotactile targets. While participants responded near-perfectly on the unimodal target trials, their performance on the visuotactile target trials was deleteriously affected by the simultaneous presentation of a visual stimulus on (as opposed to away from) their body. In particular, when the visual stimulus was presented to their fingertip, participants failed to respond to far more of the tactile than visual stimuli on bimodal trials. The magnitude of this visual dominance effect decreased significantly when the visual stimulus was moved off the body. When a rubber hand was placed at the off-body location, a similar (albeit reduced) visual dominance effect was observed in both positions. These results therefore suggest that visuotactile interactions are strongest when visual stimuli are presented on a body (no matter whom that body, or body-part, belongs to).
在大多数实验情况下,视觉往往主导触觉,尤其是当视觉信息呈现在身体上或附近时。我们结合了两种视觉主导范式,以研究身体上和身体外的视觉和触觉之间的跨模态相互作用:1)Colavita 视觉主导效应,该效应最近已扩展到视觉和触觉;2)橡胶手错觉,该错觉常用于探测视触相互作用。具体来说,我们研究了将视觉刺激从参与者的身体上移开是否会影响视觉主导,以及这种主导如何受到橡胶手的存在/不存在的影响(因为橡胶手错觉提供了一种在空间中扩展自己身体的代表方式)。参与者对随机出现的仅视觉、仅触觉和视触目标做出快速检测/辨别反应。虽然参与者在单模态目标试验中表现得近乎完美,但在视触目标试验中,同时呈现身体上(而不是远离身体)的视觉刺激会对他们的表现产生不利影响。特别是,当视觉刺激呈现在他们的指尖时,参与者在双模态试验中未能对更多的触觉刺激做出反应。当视觉刺激从身体上移开时,这种视觉主导效应的幅度显著减小。当将橡胶手放在身体外的位置时,在这两个位置都观察到类似(尽管较小)的视觉主导效应。因此,这些结果表明,当视觉刺激呈现在身体上时(无论该身体或身体部位属于谁),视触相互作用最强。