Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 02138, USA.
Center for Mind/Brain Sciences, Università degli Studi di Trento, Mattarello, 38122, Italy.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2017 Aug;24(4):1152-1157. doi: 10.3758/s13423-016-1219-y.
When watching someone reaching to grasp an object, we typically gaze at the object before the agent's hand reaches it-that is, we make a "predictive eye movement" to the object. The received explanation is that predictive eye movements rely on a direct matching process, by which the observed action is mapped onto the motor representation of the same body movements in the observer's brain. In this article, we report evidence that calls for a reexamination of this account. We recorded the eye movements of an individual born without arms (D.C.) while he watched an actor reaching for one of two different-sized objects with a power grasp, a precision grasp, or a closed fist. D.C. showed typical predictive eye movements modulated by the actor's hand shape. This finding constitutes proof of concept that predictive eye movements during action observation can rely on visual and inferential processes, unaided by effector-specific motor simulation.
当观察某人伸手去抓物体时,我们通常会先注视物体,然后再看向主体的手——也就是说,我们会先向物体做出“预测性眼动”。目前的解释是,预测性眼动依赖于一种直接匹配的过程,通过这种过程,观察者大脑中观察到的动作被映射到与自身相同的身体运动的运动表现上。在本文中,我们报告了一些证据,这些证据要求重新审视这一解释。我们记录了一位天生没有手臂的个体(D.C.)的眼动,当他观看演员用电力手抓或精准手抓或握拳去抓两个不同大小的物体时。D.C.表现出了典型的、受演员手型影响的预测性眼动。这一发现证明了在动作观察过程中,预测性眼动可以依赖于视觉和推理过程,而无需特定效应器的运动模拟。