Gallagher Maria, Torok Agoston, Klaas Johanna, Ferrè Elisa Raffaella
Department of Psychology, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, TW200EX, UK.
School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK.
Exp Brain Res. 2020 Sep;238(9):1957-1962. doi: 10.1007/s00221-020-05852-5. Epub 2020 Jun 21.
Humans show a gravitational advantage in perception: we are more precise at judging the speed of downwards-moving than upwards-moving objects, indicating that gravitational acceleration is an internalised prior. However, it is unclear whether this gravity prior is based on purely perceptual cues or whether it can incorporate semantic knowledge. Previous research has used only objects which are known to comply with gravity, possibly confounding semantic and perceptual cues. Here we have addressed this question by asking participants to judge the speed of objects that typically move coherently with gravity (ball) or against it (rocket). Our results showed a perceptual advantage for falling stimuli, irrespective of object identity, suggesting the gravity prior is based on perceptual cues.
我们在判断向下移动的物体速度时比向上移动的物体更精确,这表明重力加速度是一种内化的先验知识。然而,尚不清楚这种重力先验知识是基于纯粹的感知线索,还是可以纳入语义知识。先前的研究仅使用已知符合重力的物体,这可能混淆了语义和感知线索。在这里,我们通过要求参与者判断通常与重力一致移动(球)或与重力相反移动(火箭)的物体的速度来解决这个问题。我们的结果显示,无论物体身份如何,下落刺激都具有感知优势,这表明重力先验知识是基于感知线索的。