Psychological Sciences Research Institute, Université catholique de Louvain, Place Cardinal Mercier 10, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.
Psychological Sciences Research Institute, Université catholique de Louvain, Place Cardinal Mercier 10, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium; Institute of Neuroscience, Université catholique de Louvain, Avenue Mounier 53, Brussels, Belgium.
Neuropsychologia. 2018 Aug;117:211-221. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2018.06.003. Epub 2018 Jun 6.
How does the eye guide the hand in an ever-changing world? The perception-action model posits that visually-guided actions rely on object size estimates that are computed from an egocentric perspective independently of the visual context. Accordingly, adjusting grip aperture to object size should be resistant to illusions emerging from the contrast between a target and surrounding elements. However, experimental studies gave discrepant results that have remained difficult to explain so far. Visual and proprioceptive information of the acting hand are potential sources of ambiguity in previous studies because the on-line corrections they allow may contribute to masking the illusory effect. To overcome this problem, we investigated the effect on prospective action judgements of the Ebbinghaus illusion, a visual illusion in which the perceived size of a central circle varies according to the size of surrounding circles. Participants had to decide whether they thought they would be able to grasp the central circle of an Ebbinghaus display between their index finger and thumb, without moving their hands. A control group had to judge the size of the central circle relative to a standard. Experiment 1 showed that the illusion affected perceptual and grasping judgements similarly. We further investigated the interaction between visual illusions and grip aperture representation by examining the effect of concurrent motor tasks on grasping judgements. We showed that participants underestimated their ability to grasp the circle when they were squeezing a ball between their index finger and thumb (Experiment 2), whereas they overestimated their ability when their fingers were spread apart (Experiment 3). The illusion also affected the grasping judgement task and modulated the interference of the squeezing movement, with the illusion of largeness enhancing the underestimation of one's grasping ability observed in Experiment 2. We conclude that visual context and body posture both influence action anticipation, and that perception and action support each other.
眼睛如何在不断变化的世界中引导手?感知-动作模型认为,视觉引导的动作依赖于从自我中心视角计算得出的目标大小估计值,而与视觉背景无关。因此,调整握持开口以适应目标大小应该不受目标与周围元素之间对比度产生的错觉影响。然而,实验研究结果存在差异,至今仍难以解释。在之前的研究中,视觉和本体感觉信息是行动手的潜在模糊来源,因为它们允许的在线修正可能有助于掩盖错觉效应。为了解决这个问题,我们研究了艾宾浩斯错觉(Ebbinghaus illusion)对预期动作判断的影响,在这种错觉中,中心圆的感知大小根据周围圆的大小而变化。参与者必须决定他们是否认为自己能够在不移动手的情况下用食指和拇指抓住艾宾浩斯显示器的中心圆。对照组必须判断中心圆相对于标准的大小。实验 1 表明,错觉对感知和抓握判断的影响相似。我们通过检查并发运动任务对抓握判断的影响,进一步研究了视觉错觉和握持开口表示之间的相互作用。我们表明,当参与者用食指和拇指挤压一个球时,他们会低估自己抓住圆圈的能力(实验 2),而当他们的手指分开时,他们会高估自己的能力(实验 3)。错觉还会影响抓握判断任务,并调节挤压运动的干扰,大的错觉会增强实验 2 中观察到的对抓握能力的低估。我们得出结论,视觉背景和身体姿势都影响动作预期,感知和动作相互支持。