Center for Neuroscience and Cognitive Systems@UniTn, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Rovereto 38068, Italy, Department of Life Science, University of Trieste, Trieste 34128, Italy, Department of Psychology, Università degli Studi di Firenze, Firenze 50135, Italy, Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, and Department of Cognitive, Linguistic and Psychological Sciences, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912.
J Neurosci. 2013 Oct 23;33(43):17081-8. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2936-13.2013.
Perceptual judgments of relative depth from binocular disparity are systematically distorted in humans, despite in principle having access to reliable 3D information. Interestingly, these distortions vanish at a natural grasping distance, as if perceived stereo depth is contingent on a specific reference distance for depth-disparity scaling that corresponds to the length of our arm. Here we show that the brain's representation of the arm indeed powerfully modulates depth perception, and that this internal calibration can be quickly updated. We used a classic visuomotor adaptation task in which subjects execute reaching movements with the visual feedback of their reaching finger displaced farther in depth, as if they had a longer arm. After adaptation, 3D perception changed dramatically, and became accurate at the "new" natural grasping distance, the updated disparity scaling reference distance. We further tested whether the rapid adaptive changes were restricted to the visual modality or were characteristic of sensory systems in general. Remarkably, we found an improvement in tactile discrimination consistent with a magnified internal image of the arm. This suggests that the brain integrates sensory signals with information about arm length, and quickly adapts to an artificially updated body structure. These adaptive processes are most likely a relic of the mechanisms needed to optimally correct for changes in size and shape of the body during ontogenesis.
尽管人类原则上可以获得可靠的 3D 信息,但他们对双眼视差相对深度的感知判断仍然会受到系统扭曲。有趣的是,这些扭曲在自然抓取距离处消失了,就好像感知到的立体深度取决于与我们手臂长度相对应的特定深度-视差缩放参考距离。在这里,我们表明大脑对手臂的表示确实可以强烈地调节深度感知,并且这种内部校准可以快速更新。我们使用了经典的视觉运动适应任务,在该任务中,主体执行的是带有视觉反馈的伸展运动,他们的伸展手指在深度上被人为地移动了更远的距离,就好像他们的手臂更长一样。适应后,3D 感知发生了巨大变化,并且在“新”的自然抓取距离处变得准确,这个更新后的视差缩放参考距离。我们进一步测试了快速自适应变化是否仅限于视觉模态,或者是否是一般感觉系统的特征。值得注意的是,我们发现触觉辨别力的提高与手臂的内部图像放大相一致。这表明大脑整合了有关手臂长度的感觉信号和信息,并迅速适应了人为更新的身体结构。这些自适应过程很可能是在个体发育过程中优化纠正身体大小和形状变化所需的机制的遗留物。