Department of Psychology, Centre for Vision Research, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ON, M3J 1P3, Canada.
Exp Brain Res. 2012 Oct;222(4):389-97. doi: 10.1007/s00221-012-3224-3. Epub 2012 Aug 25.
How do we distinguish "self" from "other"? The correlation between willing an action and seeing it occur is an important cue. We exploited the fact that this correlation needs to occur within a restricted temporal window in order to obtain a quantitative assessment of when a body part is identified as "self". We measured the threshold and sensitivity (d') for detecting a delay between movements of the finger (of both the dominant and non-dominant hands) and visual feedback as seen from four visual perspectives (the natural view, and mirror-reversed and/or inverted views). Each trial consisted of one presentation with minimum delay and another with a delay of between 33 and 150 ms. Participants indicated which presentation contained the delayed view. We varied the amount of efference copy available for this task by comparing performances for discrete movements and continuous movements. Discrete movements are associated with a stronger efference copy. Sensitivity to detect asynchrony between visual and proprioceptive information was significantly higher when movements were viewed from a "plausible" self perspective compared with when the view was reversed or inverted. Further, we found differences in performance between dominant and non-dominant hand finger movements across the continuous and single movements. Performance varied with the viewpoint from which the visual feedback was presented and on the efferent component such that optimal performance was obtained when the presentation was in the normal natural orientation and clear efferent information was available. Variations in sensitivity to visual/non-visual temporal incongruence with the viewpoint in which a movement is seen may help determine the arrangement of the underlying visual representation of the body.
我们如何区分“自我”和“他者”?意愿行动和看到行动发生之间的相关性是一个重要线索。我们利用这样一个事实,即这种相关性需要在一个有限的时间窗口内发生,以便对身体部位被识别为“自我”的时间进行定量评估。我们测量了检测手指运动(无论是惯用手还是非惯用手)与视觉反馈之间延迟的阈值和灵敏度(d'),这些反馈可以从四个视觉视角(自然视角、镜像反转视角和/或倒置视角)看到。每个试验都由一个具有最小延迟的呈现和另一个具有 33 到 150 毫秒延迟的呈现组成。参与者指出哪个呈现包含延迟视图。我们通过比较离散运动和连续运动的表现来改变这项任务中可供使用的传出副本量。离散运动与更强的传出副本相关。当运动从“合理”的自我视角观察时,与视角反转或倒置时相比,检测视觉和本体感觉信息之间的异步的敏感性明显更高。此外,我们在连续运动和单次运动中发现了主导手和非主导手手指运动之间的表现差异。表现随视觉反馈呈现的视角而变化,也随传出成分而变化,因此当呈现处于正常自然方向并且可以获得清晰的传出信息时,可获得最佳表现。敏感性随运动所看到的视角而变化,这种变化可能有助于确定身体的底层视觉表示的排列。