School of Psychology, University of East Anglia, UK.
Psychol Sci. 2013 Aug;24(8):1379-88. doi: 10.1177/0956797612469209. Epub 2013 Jun 17.
When looking at static visual images, people often exhibit mental animation, anticipating visual events that have not yet happened. But what determines when mental animation occurs? Measuring mental animation using localized brain function (visual motion processing in the middle temporal and middle superior temporal areas, MT+), we demonstrated that animating static pictures of objects is dependent both on the functionally relevant spatial arrangement that objects have with one another (e.g., a bottle above a glass vs. a glass above a bottle) and on the linguistic judgment to be made about those objects (e.g., "Is the bottle above the glass?" vs. "Is the bottle bigger than the glass?"). Furthermore, we showed that mental animation is driven by functional relations and language separately in the right hemisphere of the brain but conjointly in the left hemisphere. Mental animation is not a unitary construct; the predictions humans make about the visual world are driven flexibly, with hemispheric asymmetry in the routes to MT+ activation.
当观察静态视觉图像时,人们通常会产生心理动画,即预期尚未发生的视觉事件。但是,是什么决定了心理动画的发生呢?通过测量使用局部脑功能(中颞和中颞上区域的视觉运动处理,MT+)进行的心理动画,我们证明了对物体的静态图片进行动画处理既取决于物体彼此之间具有功能相关性的空间排列(例如,瓶子在杯子上方与杯子在瓶子上方),也取决于对这些物体进行的语言判断(例如,“瓶子在杯子上方吗?”与“瓶子比杯子大吗?”)。此外,我们还表明,在大脑右半球,心理动画是由功能关系和语言分别驱动的,但在左半球则是联合驱动的。心理动画不是一个单一的结构;人类对视觉世界的预测是灵活驱动的,MT+激活的途径存在半球不对称性。