Ogden College of Science and Engineering, Western Kentucky University, United States.
Center for Applied Science in Health and Aging, Western Kentucky University, United States.
Perception. 2020 Sep;49(9):968-977. doi: 10.1177/0301006620948503. Epub 2020 Aug 11.
The ability of 32 younger (ages ranged from 19 to 32 years) and older adults (ages ranged from 65 to 83 years) to visually perceive outdoor distances was evaluated; we used the method of equal-appearing intervals. On any given trial, the observers adjusted five distance intervals in depth so that they all appeared equivalent in magnitude (and equal to a standard initial egocentric distance of 6 m). The judgments of approximately two thirds of the younger and older observers exhibited varying degrees of perceptual compression, while those of the remaining one third were essentially accurate. Unlike a number of previous studies that evaluated the perception of shorter distances, no significant effects of age were obtained in the current experiment. In particular, there were no significant effects of age upon either accuracy or precision. The ability of human observers to evaluate large-scale distances outdoors is well maintained with increasing age.
我们评估了 32 名年轻(年龄范围为 19 至 32 岁)和 32 名年长(年龄范围为 65 至 83 岁)成年人的户外远距离视觉感知能力;我们使用了等距呈现方法。在任何给定的试验中,观察者都会调整五个深度距离间隔,以使它们在大小上都显得相等(与标准的初始自我中心距离 6 米相等)。大约三分之二的年轻和年长观察者的判断表现出不同程度的感知压缩,而其余三分之一的判断则基本准确。与许多之前评估短距离感知的研究不同,在当前实验中并未获得年龄的显著影响。特别是,在准确性或精密度方面,年龄均无显著影响。随着年龄的增长,人类观察者评估户外大尺度距离的能力得到了很好的保持。