Cuturi Luigi F, Gori Monica
Unit for Visually Impaired People, Science and Technology for Children and Adults, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Genoa, Italy.
Front Neurosci. 2017 Dec 6;11:687. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2017.00687. eCollection 2017.
The orientation of the body in space can influence perception of verticality leading sometimes to biases consistent with priors peaked at the most common head and body orientation, that is upright. In this study, we investigate haptic perception of verticality in sighted individuals and early and late blind adults when tilted counterclockwise in the roll plane. Participants were asked to perform a stimulus orientation discrimination task with their body tilted to their left ear side 90° relative to gravity. Stimuli were presented by using a motorized haptic bar. In order to test whether different reference frames relative to the head influenced perception of verticality, we varied the position of the stimulus on the body longitudinal axis. Depending on the stimulus position sighted participants tended to have biases away or toward their body tilt. Visually impaired individuals instead show a different pattern of verticality estimations. A bias toward head and body tilt (i.e., Aubert effect) was observed in late blind individuals. Interestingly, no strong biases were observed in early blind individuals. Overall, these results posit visual sensory information to be fundamental in influencing the haptic readout of proprioceptive and vestibular information about body orientation relative to gravity. The acquisition of an idiotropic vector signaling the upright might take place through vision during development. Regarding early blind individuals, independent spatial navigation experience likely enhanced by echolocation behavior might have a role in such acquisition. In the case of participants with late onset blindness, early experience of vision might lead them to anchor their visually acquired priors to the haptic modality with no disambiguation between head and body references as observed in sighted individuals (Fraser et al., 2015). With our study, we aim to investigate haptic perception of gravity direction in unusual body tilts when vision is absent due to visual impairment. Insofar, our findings throw light on the influence of proprioceptive/vestibular sensory information on haptic perceived verticality in blind individuals showing how this phenomenon is affected by visual experience.
身体在空间中的方位会影响垂直性感知,有时会导致与先验一致的偏差,这些先验在最常见的头部和身体方位(即直立)处达到峰值。在本研究中,我们调查了视力正常的个体以及早期和晚期失明成年人在滚动平面中逆时针倾斜时对垂直性的触觉感知。参与者被要求在身体相对于重力向左耳侧倾斜90°的情况下执行刺激方位辨别任务。刺激通过一个电动触觉棒呈现。为了测试相对于头部的不同参考框架是否会影响垂直性感知,我们改变了刺激在身体纵轴上的位置。根据刺激位置的不同,视力正常的参与者往往会出现远离或朝向身体倾斜方向的偏差。相反,视力受损个体表现出不同的垂直性估计模式。在晚期失明个体中观察到朝向头部和身体倾斜方向的偏差(即奥伯特效应)。有趣的是,在早期失明个体中未观察到强烈的偏差。总体而言,这些结果表明视觉感官信息对于影响关于身体相对于重力方位的本体感觉和前庭信息的触觉读出至关重要。指示直立的自向性矢量的获取可能在发育过程中通过视觉发生。对于早期失明个体,可能通过回声定位行为增强的独立空间导航经验可能在此类获取过程中发挥作用。对于迟发性失明的参与者,早期的视觉经验可能会使他们像视力正常的个体那样(弗雷泽等人,2015年),将通过视觉获得的先验锚定到触觉模态,而在头部和身体参考之间没有歧义。通过我们的研究,我们旨在调查在因视力障碍而没有视觉时,不寻常身体倾斜情况下对重力方向的触觉感知。到目前为止,我们的研究结果揭示了本体感觉/前庭感官信息对盲人触觉感知垂直性的影响,展示了这种现象是如何受到视觉经验影响的。