1Department of Psychology, Tufts University.
Psychol Sci. 2014 Feb;25(2):605-12. doi: 10.1177/0956797613503174. Epub 2013 Dec 5.
In a classic psychological science experiment, Shepard and Metzler (1971) discovered that the time participants took to judge whether two rotated abstract block figures were identical increased monotonically with the figures' relative angular disparity. They posited that participants rotate mental images to achieve a match and that mental rotation recruits motor processes. This interpretation has become central in the literature, but until now, surprisingly few researchers have compared mental and physical rotation. We had participants rotate virtual Shepard and Metzler figures mentally and physically; response time, accuracy, and real-time rotation data were collected. Results suggest that mental and physical rotation processes overlap and also reveal novel conclusions about physical rotation that have implications for mental rotation. Notably, participants did not rotate figures to achieve a match, but rather until they reached an off-axis canonical difference, and rotational strategies markedly differed for judgments of whether the figures were the same or different.
在一项经典的心理学科学实验中,谢巴德和梅茨勒(1971)发现,参与者判断两个旋转的抽象块状图形是否相同时,所花费的时间与图形的相对角度差异单调递增。他们假设参与者会旋转心理图像以达到匹配,而心理旋转则需要运动过程。这一解释在文献中已经成为核心内容,但直到现在,令人惊讶的是,很少有研究人员比较心理旋转和物理旋转。我们让参与者在心理和身体上旋转虚拟的谢巴德和梅茨勒图形;收集了反应时间、准确性和实时旋转数据。结果表明,心理和身体的旋转过程有重叠,也揭示了关于物理旋转的新结论,这些结论对心理旋转有影响。值得注意的是,参与者不是为了达到匹配而旋转图形,而是直到他们达到一个离轴的标准差异,并且在判断图形是否相同或不同时,旋转策略有明显的不同。