Cavanagh P, Mather G
Département de Psychologie, Université de Montréal, Québec, Canada.
Spat Vis. 1989;4(2-3):103-29. doi: 10.1163/156856889x00077.
Several authors have proposed that motion is analyzed by two separate processes: short-range and long-range. We claim that the differences between short-range and long-range motion phenomena are a direct consequence of the stimuli used in the two paradigms and are not evidence for the existence of two qualitatively different motion processes. We propose that a single style of motion analysis, similar to the well known Reichardt and Marr-Ullman motion detectors, underlies all motion phenomena. Although there are different detectors of this type specialized for different visual attributes (namely first-order and second-order stimuli), they all share the same mode of operation. We review the studies of second-order motion stimuli to show that they share the basic phenomena observed for first-order stimuli. The similarity across stimulus types suggests, not parallel streams of motion extraction, one short-range and passive and the other long-range and intelligent, but a concatenation of a common mode of initial motion extraction followed by a general inference process.
几位作者提出,运动是通过两个独立的过程进行分析的:短程和长程。我们认为,短程和长程运动现象之间的差异是两种范式中所使用刺激的直接结果,而不是存在两种质的不同运动过程的证据。我们提出,一种单一的运动分析方式,类似于著名的赖夏特和马尔-乌尔曼运动探测器,是所有运动现象的基础。尽管有针对不同视觉属性(即一阶和二阶刺激)的不同类型的探测器,但它们都具有相同的操作模式。我们回顾了二阶运动刺激的研究,以表明它们与一阶刺激所观察到的基本现象相同。刺激类型之间的相似性表明,不是并行的运动提取流,一个是短程和被动的,另一个是长程和智能的,而是一个共同的初始运动提取模式的串联,随后是一个一般的推理过程。