Davarpanah Jazi Shirin, Yau Michelle, Westwood David A, Heath Matthew
School of Kinesiology, The University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada.
Exp Brain Res. 2015 Jul;233(7):2029-40. doi: 10.1007/s00221-015-4274-0. Epub 2015 Apr 14.
When an individual grasps a physical object, the visuomotor system is able to specify grip aperture via absolute visual information. In contrast, grasping to a location previously occupied by an object (i.e., pantomime-grasping) results in the specification of grip aperture via relative visual information. The basis for the dissociable visual codes is thought to reflect that pantomime-grasping is a perception-based task. It is, however, important to recognize that grasping a physical object and pantomime-grasping differ not only in terms of their visuospatial properties but also with respect to the availability of haptic feedback: Grasping a physical object provides haptic cues derived from touching the object, whereas no such feedback is available in a traditional pantomime-grasping task. As such, we examined whether haptic feedback influences the information supporting a pantomime-grasp performed after a 1000-ms visual delay. Participants completed responses in each of the three tasks: (1) grasping a physical object, (2) traditional pantomime-grasping wherein the to-be-grasped object was removed from the grasping environment and (3) pantomime-grasping wherein the experimenter placed the object between participants' thumb and forefinger once they had completed their response (i.e., pantomime-grasping with haptic feedback). Just-noticeable-difference (JND) scores were computed to determine whether responses adhered to or violated the psychophysical (i.e., relative) principles of Weber's law. JNDs for the traditional pantomime-grasping task adhered to Weber's law, whereas JNDs for grasping a physical object and for pantomime-grasping with haptic feedback violated the law. Thus, we propose that convergent visual and haptic cues support the absolute specification of object size in a pantomime-grasping task. Furthermore, our results highlight the important role of multisensory cue integration in a target-defined grasping task.
当个体抓握一个物理物体时,视觉运动系统能够通过绝对视觉信息来确定抓握孔径。相比之下,抓握一个先前被物体占据的位置(即模拟抓握)则是通过相对视觉信息来确定抓握孔径。这种可分离的视觉编码的基础被认为反映了模拟抓握是一项基于感知的任务。然而,重要的是要认识到,抓握物理物体和模拟抓握不仅在视觉空间属性方面存在差异,而且在触觉反馈的可用性方面也有所不同:抓握物理物体可提供源自触摸物体的触觉线索,而在传统的模拟抓握任务中则没有这种反馈。因此,我们研究了触觉反馈是否会影响在1000毫秒视觉延迟后执行的模拟抓握所依据的信息。参与者完成了三项任务中的每一项:(1)抓握一个物理物体,(2)传统模拟抓握,即将要抓握的物体从抓握环境中移除,以及(3)模拟抓握,即一旦参与者完成反应,实验者就将物体放置在参与者的拇指和食指之间(即带有触觉反馈的模拟抓握)。计算了恰可察觉差(JND)分数,以确定反应是否符合或违反了韦伯定律的心理物理学(即相对)原则。传统模拟抓握任务的JND分数符合韦伯定律,而抓握物理物体和带有触觉反馈的模拟抓握的JND分数则违反了该定律。因此,我们提出,汇聚的视觉和触觉线索在模拟抓握任务中支持对物体大小的绝对确定。此外,我们的结果突出了多感官线索整合在目标定义的抓握任务中的重要作用。