Collier Elizabeth S, Lawson Rebecca
Institute of Psychology Health and Society, Eleanor Rathbone Building, University of Liverpool, Bedford Street South, Liverpool, L69 7ZA, UK.
Atten Percept Psychophys. 2018 May;80(4):971-985. doi: 10.3758/s13414-017-1454-y.
The action-specific account of perception claims that what we see is perceptually scaled according to our action capacity. However, it has been argued that this account relies on an overly confirmatory research strategy-predicting the presence of, and then finding, an effect (Firestone & Scholl, 2014). A comprehensive approach should also test disconfirmatory predictions, in which no effect is expected. In two experiments, we tested one such prediction based on the action-specific account, namely that scaling effects should occur only when participants intend to act (Witt, Proffitt, & Epstein, 2005). All participants wore asymmetric gloves in which one glove was padded with extra material, so that one hand was wider than the other. Participants visually estimated the width of apertures. The action-specific account predicts that the apertures should be estimated as being narrower for the wider hand, but only when participants intend to act. We found this scaling effect when it should not have occurred (Exp. 1, for participants who did not intend to act), as well as no effect when it should have occurred (Exp. 2, for participants who intended to act but were given a cover story for the visibility and position of their hands). Thus, the cover story used in Experiment 2 eliminated the scaling effect found in Experiment 1. We suggest that the scaling effect observed in Experiment 1 likely resulted from demand characteristics associated with using a salient, unexplained manipulation (e.g., telling people which hand to use to do the task). Our results suggest that the action-specific account lacks predictive power.
感知的行动特异性理论认为,我们所看到的事物在感知上是根据我们的行动能力进行缩放的。然而,有人认为该理论依赖于一种过度确证性的研究策略——预测某种效应的存在,然后去发现这种效应(费尔斯通和肖尔,2014)。一种全面的方法还应该测试否证性预测,即预期不会出现效应的情况。在两项实验中,我们基于行动特异性理论测试了这样一种预测,即缩放效应应该只在参与者打算行动时才会出现(维特、普罗菲特和爱泼斯坦,2005)。所有参与者都戴着不对称手套,其中一只手套填充了额外的材料,使得一只手比另一只手更宽。参与者通过视觉估计孔径的宽度。行动特异性理论预测,对于较宽的手,孔径应该被估计得更窄,但前提是参与者打算行动。我们发现在不应该出现这种缩放效应的情况下出现了该效应(实验1,针对不打算行动的参与者),而在应该出现该效应的情况下却没有出现(实验2,针对打算行动但被告知关于他们手的可见性和位置的掩饰故事的参与者)。因此,实验2中使用的掩饰故事消除了实验1中发现的缩放效应。我们认为实验1中观察到的缩放效应可能是由于使用了一种显著的、未解释的操作(例如,告诉人们用哪只手做任务)所带来的需求特征导致的。我们的结果表明行动特异性理论缺乏预测力。