Thurman Steven M, Giese Martin A, Grossman Emily D
Department of Cognitive Science, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, University of California, Irvine, USA.
J Vis. 2010 Oct 1;10(12):15. doi: 10.1167/10.12.15.
Among the most common events in our daily lives is seeing people in action. Scientists have accumulated evidence suggesting humans may have developed specialized mechanisms for recognizing these visual events. In the current experiments, we apply the "bubbles" technique to construct space-time classification movies that reveal the key features human observers use to discriminate biological motion stimuli (point-light and stick figure walkers). We find that observers rely on similar features for both types of stimuli, namely, form information in the upper body and dynamic information in the relative motion of the limbs. To measure the contributions of motion and form analyses in this task, we computed classification movies from the responses of a biologically plausible model that can discriminate biological motion patterns (M. A. Giese & T. Poggio, 2003). The model classification movies reveal similar key features to observers, with the model's motion and form pathways each capturing unique aspects of human performance. In a second experiment, we computed classification movies derived from trials of varying exposure times (67-267 ms) and demonstrate the transition to form-based strategies as motion information becomes less available. Overall, these results highlight the relative contributions of motion and form computations to biological motion perception.
在我们日常生活中最常见的事情之一就是观察人们的行为。科学家们已经积累了证据,表明人类可能已经发展出专门的机制来识别这些视觉事件。在当前的实验中,我们应用“气泡”技术构建时空分类影片,以揭示人类观察者用于区分生物运动刺激(点光和简笔画行走者)的关键特征。我们发现观察者对这两种类型的刺激都依赖于相似的特征,即上半身的形状信息和四肢相对运动中的动态信息。为了测量在这项任务中运动分析和形状分析的贡献,我们根据一个能够区分生物运动模式的生物学上合理的模型(M. A. 吉泽和T. 波吉奥,2003年)的反应计算出分类影片。模型分类影片显示出与观察者相似的关键特征,模型的运动和形状通路各自捕捉到了人类表现的独特方面。在第二个实验中,我们计算了来自不同曝光时间(67 - 267毫秒)试验的分类影片,并证明随着运动信息变得不那么可用,会向基于形状的策略转变。总体而言,这些结果突出了运动和形状计算对生物运动感知的相对贡献。