Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Goddard 426, 3710 Hamilton Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA; Neuroscience Graduate Group, University of Pennsylvania, Goddard 426, 3710 Hamilton Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA; Bioengineering Graduate Group, University of Pennsylvania, Goddard 426, 3710 Hamilton Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Goddard 426, 3710 Hamilton Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA; Institute of Optics, Spanish National Research Council, IO-CSIC, Calle Serrano 121, 28006 Madrid, Spain.
Curr Biol. 2019 Aug 5;29(15):2586-2592.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.06.070. Epub 2019 Jul 25.
Monovision is a common prescription lens correction for presbyopia [1]. Each eye is corrected for a different distance, causing one image to be blurrier than the other. Millions of people have monovision corrections, but little is known about how interocular blur differences affect motion perception. Here, we report that blur differences cause a previously unknown motion illusion that makes people dramatically misperceive the distance and three-dimensional direction of moving objects. The effect occurs because the blurry and sharp images are processed at different speeds. For moving objects, the mismatch in processing speed causes a neural disparity, which results in the misperceptions. A variant of a 100-year-old stereo-motion phenomenon called the Pulfrich effect [2], the illusion poses an apparent paradox: blur reduces contrast, and contrast reductions are known to cause neural processing delays [3-6], but our results indicate that blurry images are processed milliseconds more quickly. We resolve the paradox with known properties of the early visual system, show that the misperceptions can be severe enough to impact public safety, and demonstrate that the misperceptions can be eliminated with novel combinations of non-invasive ophthalmic interventions. The fact that substantial perceptual errors are caused by millisecond differences in processing speed highlights the exquisite temporal calibration required for accurate perceptual estimation. The motion illusion-the reverse Pulfrich effect-and the paradigm we use to measure it should help reveal how optical and image properties impact temporal processing, an important but understudied issue in vision and visual neuroscience.
单视是一种常见的用于治疗远视的处方镜片矫正方法[1]。每只眼睛都被矫正到不同的距离,导致一只眼睛的图像比另一只眼睛模糊。数以百万计的人接受了单视矫正,但对于双眼模糊差异如何影响运动感知知之甚少。在这里,我们报告说,模糊差异会导致一种以前未知的运动错觉,使人们对移动物体的距离和三维方向产生显著的错觉。这种效果的产生是因为模糊和清晰的图像以不同的速度处理。对于移动的物体,处理速度的不匹配会导致神经差异,从而导致感知错误。作为一种被称为普尔弗里希效应的已有 100 年历史的立体运动现象的变体[2],这种错觉构成了一个明显的悖论:模糊会降低对比度,而对比度的降低已知会导致神经处理延迟[3-6],但我们的结果表明,模糊的图像以毫秒级的速度更快地处理。我们利用早期视觉系统的已知特性解决了这个悖论,表明这些错觉可能严重到影响公共安全,并展示了通过新型非侵入性眼科干预措施的组合可以消除这些错觉。毫秒级的处理速度差异会导致显著的感知错误,这一事实突出了准确感知估计所需的精确时间校准。运动错觉——反向普尔弗里希效应——以及我们用来测量它的范式,应该有助于揭示光学和图像特性如何影响时间处理,这是视觉和视觉神经科学中一个重要但研究不足的问题。