Nakashima Ryoichi, Iwai Ritsuko, Ueda Sayako, Kumada Takatsune
RIKEN Brain Science Institute-TOYOTA Collaboration Center, RIKEN Wako, Japan.
RIKEN Brain Science Institute-TOYOTA Collaboration Center, RIKEN Wako, Japan ; Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University Kyoto, Japan.
Front Psychol. 2015 Nov 30;6:1837. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01837. eCollection 2015.
When observers perceive several objects in a space, at the same time, they should effectively perceive their own position as a viewpoint. However, little is known about observers' percepts of their own spatial location based on the visual scene information viewed from them. Previous studies indicate that two distinct visual spatial processes exist in the locomotion situation: the egocentric position perception and egocentric direction perception. Those studies examined such perceptions in information rich visual environments where much dynamic and static visual information was available. This study examined these two perceptions in information of impoverished environments, including only static lane edge information (i.e., limited information). We investigated the visual factors associated with static lane edge information that may affect these perceptions. Especially, we examined the effects of the two factors on egocentric direction and position perceptions. One is the "uprightness factor" that "far" visual information is seen at upper location than "near" visual information. The other is the "central vision factor" that observers usually look at "far" visual information using central vision (i.e., foveal vision) whereas 'near' visual information using peripheral vision. Experiment 1 examined the effect of the "uprightness factor" using normal and inverted road images. Experiment 2 examined the effect of the "central vision factor" using normal and transposed road images where the upper half of the normal image was presented under the lower half. Experiment 3 aimed to replicate the results of Experiments 1 and 2. Results showed that egocentric direction perception is interfered with image inversion or image transposition, whereas egocentric position perception is robust against these image transformations. That is, both "uprightness" and "central vision" factors are important for egocentric direction perception, but not for egocentric position perception. Therefore, the two visual spatial perceptions about observers' own viewpoints are fundamentally dissociable.
当观察者同时在一个空间中感知多个物体时,他们应该能够有效地将自己的位置感知为一个视点。然而,基于从自身视角所看到的视觉场景信息,人们对观察者对自身空间位置的感知却知之甚少。先前的研究表明,在运动情境中存在两种不同的视觉空间过程:自我中心位置感知和自我中心方向感知。这些研究在信息丰富的视觉环境中考察了此类感知,在这种环境中有大量的动态和静态视觉信息。本研究在信息匮乏的环境中考察了这两种感知,这种环境仅包括静态的车道边缘信息(即有限的信息)。我们研究了与静态车道边缘信息相关的可能影响这些感知的视觉因素。特别是,我们考察了这两个因素对自我中心方向和位置感知的影响。一个是“垂直性因素”,即“远”的视觉信息比“近”的视觉信息出现在更高的位置。另一个是“中央视觉因素”,即观察者通常使用中央视觉(即中央凹视觉)看“远”的视觉信息,而使用周边视觉看“近”的视觉信息。实验1使用正常和倒置的道路图像考察了“垂直性因素”的影响。实验2使用正常和上下颠倒的道路图像考察了“中央视觉因素”的影响,在上下颠倒的道路图像中,正常图像的上半部分出现在下半部分之下。实验3旨在重复实验1和实验2的结果。结果表明,自我中心方向感知会受到图像倒置或图像颠倒的干扰,而自我中心位置感知对这些图像变换具有较强的抗性。也就是说,“垂直性”和“中央视觉”因素对自我中心方向感知都很重要,但对自我中心位置感知则不然。因此,关于观察者自身视点的这两种视觉空间感知在根本上是可分离的。