Department of Psychology, Otto Creutzfeldt Center for Cognitive and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Münster.
Psychol Sci. 2018 Sep;29(9):1504-1514. doi: 10.1177/0956797618778498. Epub 2018 Jul 13.
The ability to navigate through crowds of moving people accurately, efficiently, and without causing collisions is essential for our day-to-day lives. Vision provides key information about one's own self-motion as well as the motions of other people in the crowd. These two types of information (optic flow and biological motion) have each been investigated extensively; however, surprisingly little research has been dedicated to investigating how they are processed when presented concurrently. Here, we showed that patterns of biological motion have a negative impact on visual-heading estimation when people within the crowd move their limbs but do not move through the scene. Conversely, limb motion facilitates heading estimation when walkers move independently through the scene. Interestingly, this facilitation occurs for crowds containing both regular and perturbed depictions of humans, suggesting that it is likely caused by low-level motion cues inherent in the biological motion of other people.
准确、高效地在人群中穿行,并且不发生碰撞,这是我们日常生活的基本需求。视觉为我们提供了关于自身运动和人群中其他人运动的关键信息。这两种信息(视流和生物运动)都已经得到了广泛的研究;然而,令人惊讶的是,很少有研究致力于研究当它们同时呈现时是如何被处理的。在这里,我们发现,当人群中的人移动他们的四肢但不穿过场景时,生物运动的模式会对视觉朝向估计产生负面影响。相反,当行人独立穿过场景时,肢体运动会促进朝向估计。有趣的是,这种促进作用不仅发生在包含常规和受干扰的人类描述的人群中,这表明它很可能是由其他人的生物运动中固有的低级运动线索引起的。