Welsh Timothy N, Reid Connor, Manson Gerome, Constable Merryn D, Tremblay Luc
Faculty of Kinesiology & Physical Education, Centre for Motor Control, University of Toronto, Canada.
Faculty of Kinesiology & Physical Education, Centre for Motor Control, University of Toronto, Canada.
Acta Psychol (Amst). 2020 Mar;204:103028. doi: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2020.103028. Epub 2020 Feb 12.
Many researchers have proposed that when an individual observes the actions of another individual, the observer simulates the action using many of the same neural areas that are involved in action production. The present study was designed to test this simulation hypothesis by comparing the perception of multisensory stimuli during both the execution and observation of an aiming action. The present work used the fusion illusion - an audio-visual illusion in which two visual stimuli presented with one auditory stimulus are erroneously perceived as being one visual stimulus. Previous research has shown that, during action execution, susceptibly to this illusion is reduced early in the execution of the movement when visual information may be more highly weighted than other sensory information. We sought to determine whether or not a non-acting observer of an action showed a similar reduction in susceptibility to the fusion illusion. Participants fixated a target and either executed or observed a manual aiming movement to that target. Audiovisual stimuli were presented at 0, 100, or 200 ms relative to movement onset and participants reported the number of perceived flashes after the movement was completed. Analysis of perceived flashes revealed that participants were less susceptible to the fusion illusion when the stimuli were presented early (100 ms) relative to later in the movement (200 ms). Critically, this pattern emerged in both execution and observation tasks. These findings support the hypothesis that observers simulate the performance of the actor and experience comparable real-time alterations in multisensory processing.
许多研究人员提出,当一个人观察另一个人的动作时,观察者会使用许多与动作产生相关的相同神经区域来模拟该动作。本研究旨在通过比较在执行和观察瞄准动作过程中对多感官刺激的感知来检验这一模拟假设。本研究使用了融合错觉——一种视听错觉,即两个视觉刺激与一个听觉刺激同时呈现时,会被错误地感知为一个视觉刺激。先前的研究表明,在动作执行过程中,当视觉信息的权重可能高于其他感官信息时,在动作执行早期对这种错觉的易感性会降低。我们试图确定动作的非执行观察者是否也表现出对融合错觉的易感性有类似的降低。参与者注视一个目标,然后要么执行要么观察向该目标的手动瞄准动作。视听刺激在相对于动作开始的0、100或200毫秒时呈现,参与者在动作完成后报告感知到的闪光次数。对感知到的闪光的分析表明,当刺激在动作后期(200毫秒)之前较早(100毫秒)呈现时,参与者对融合错觉的易感性较低。关键的是,这种模式在执行和观察任务中都出现了。这些发现支持了这样一种假设,即观察者会模拟动作执行者的表现,并在多感官处理中经历类似的实时变化。