Wood Daniel K, Gallivan Jason P, Chapman Craig S, Milne Jennifer L, Culham Jody C, Goodale Melvyn A
Neuroscience Program, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada.
J Vis. 2011 Sep 22;11(10):16. doi: 10.1167/11.10.16.
In this study, we investigated whether visual salience influences the competition between potential targets during reach planning. Participants initiated rapid pointing movements toward multiple potential targets, with the final target being cued only after the reach was initiated. We manipulated visual salience by varying the luminance of potential targets. Across two separate experiments, we demonstrate that initial reach trajectories are directed toward more salient targets, even when there are twice as many targets (and therefore twice the likelihood of the final target appearing) on the opposite side of space. We also show that this salience bias is time-dependent, as evidenced by the return of spatially averaged reach trajectories when participants were given an additional 500-ms preview of the target display prior to the cue to move. This study shows both when and to what extent task-irrelevant luminance differences affect the planning of reaches to multiple potential targets.
在本研究中,我们调查了视觉显著性在伸手够物规划过程中是否会影响潜在目标之间的竞争。参与者开始向多个潜在目标进行快速指向动作,最终目标仅在伸手动作开始后才给出提示。我们通过改变潜在目标的亮度来操纵视觉显著性。在两个独立实验中,我们证明即使空间另一侧的目标数量是这边的两倍(即最终目标出现的可能性也是这边的两倍),初始伸手轨迹仍会指向更显著的目标。我们还表明这种显著性偏差是时间依赖性的,这一点在参与者在得到移动提示前额外获得5秒目标显示预览时,空间平均伸手轨迹恢复这一现象中得到了证明。这项研究表明了与任务无关的亮度差异在何时以及在多大程度上会影响对多个潜在目标的伸手规划。