Cappe Céline, Clarke Aaron, Mohr Christine, Herzog Michael H
Laboratory of Psychophysics, Brain Mind Institute, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, SwitzerlandCentre de Recherche Cerveau et Cognition, Université de Toulouse, Toulouse, France.
Laboratory of Psychophysics, Brain Mind Institute, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland.
J Vis. 2014 Jul 3;14(8):4. doi: 10.1167/14.8.4.
In cognition, common factors play a crucial role. For example, different types of intelligence are highly correlated, pointing to a common factor, which is often called g. One might expect that a similar common factor would also exist for vision. Surprisingly, no one in the field has addressed this issue. Here, we provide the first evidence that there is no common factor for vision. We tested 40 healthy students’ performance in six basic visual paradigms: visual acuity, vernier discrimination,two visual backward masking paradigms, Gabor detection, and bisection discrimination. One might expect that performance levels on these tasks would be highly correlated because some individuals generally have better vision than others due to superior optics,better retinal or cortical processing, or enriched visual experience. However, only four out of 15 correlations were significant, two of which were nontrivial. These results cannot be explained by high intraobserver variability or ceiling effects because test–retest reliability was high and the variance in our student population is commensurate with that from other studies with well sighted populations. Using a variety of tests (e.g., principal components analysis, Bayes theorem, test–retest reliability), we show the robustness of our null results. We suggest that neuroplasticity operates during everyday experience to generate marked individual differences. Our results apply only to the normally sighted population (i.e., restricted range sampling). For the entire population, including those with degenerate vision, we expect different results.
在认知领域,共同因素起着至关重要的作用。例如,不同类型的智力高度相关,这指向一个共同因素,通常称为g因素。人们可能会预期视觉方面也存在类似的共同因素。令人惊讶的是,该领域中没有人探讨过这个问题。在此,我们提供了首个证据,表明视觉不存在共同因素。我们测试了40名健康学生在六种基本视觉范式中的表现:视力、游标辨别、两种视觉后向掩蔽范式、Gabor检测和二等分辨别。人们可能会预期这些任务的表现水平会高度相关,因为由于光学条件优越、视网膜或皮层处理能力更强或视觉体验更丰富,一些个体的视力通常比其他人更好。然而,15组相关性中只有4组具有显著性,其中两组并非微不足道。这些结果无法用观察者内部的高变异性或天花板效应来解释,因为重测信度很高,而且我们学生群体的方差与其他视力正常人群的研究结果相当。通过使用各种测试(例如主成分分析、贝叶斯定理、重测信度),我们证明了我们的零结果的稳健性。我们认为神经可塑性在日常体验中发挥作用,从而产生显著的个体差异。我们的结果仅适用于视力正常的人群(即受限范围抽样)。对于包括视力退化者在内的整个人口,我们预计会有不同的结果。