Laboratory of Psychology, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine, 1-20-1 Handayama, Higashiku, Hamamatsu, Shizuoka 431-3192, Japan.
Faculty of Psychology, Otemon Gakuin University, 2-1-15 Nishi-Ai, Ibaraki, Osaka 567-8502, Japan.
Multisens Res. 2023 Apr 7;36(4):367-386. doi: 10.1163/22134808-bja10097.
The mechanisms underlying geocentric (orientations of an object or the body relative to 'gravity') and egocentric estimates (object orientation relative to the 'body') have each been examined; however, little is known regarding the association between these estimates, especially when the body is nearly upright. To address this, we conducted two psychophysical experiments. In Experiment 1, participants estimated the direction of a visual line (subjective visual vertical; SVV) and their own body relative to gravity (subjective body tilt; SBT) and the direction of a visual line relative to the body longitudinal axis (subjective visual body axis; SVBA) during a small-range whole-body roll tilt. We evaluated the correlations between performance on each of these tasks as covariates of actual body tilt angles. Our results showed a significant correlation of performance (estimation errors) on the SVBA task with performance on the SBT task but not performance on the SVV task at the group level after adjusting for the actual body tilt angles, suggesting a link between the estimates for SVBA and SBT tasks. To confirm this relationship, in Experiment 2, we further assessed whether manipulating the subjective direction of the body axis by providing visual feedback in the SVBA task subsequently affected SBT performance. We found that feedback in the SVBA task significantly shifted the SBT angles even when the actual body angles were identical. The observed association between SVBA and SBT performance supports at least a partially shared mechanism underlying body tilt and egocentric estimates when the body is nearly upright.
我们进行了两项心理物理学实验。在实验 1 中,参与者在小范围全身滚动倾斜过程中,估计了视觉线的方向(主观视觉垂直;SVV)、相对于重力的自身身体方向(主观身体倾斜;SBT)以及视觉线相对于身体纵轴的方向(主观视觉身体轴;SVBA)。我们评估了这些任务中每个任务的性能之间的相关性,将其作为实际身体倾斜角度的协变量。我们的结果表明,在调整实际身体倾斜角度后,SVBA 任务的表现(估计误差)与 SBT 任务显著相关,但与 SVV 任务不相关,这表明 SVBA 和 SBT 任务的估计之间存在联系。为了确认这种关系,在实验 2 中,我们进一步评估了在 SVBA 任务中提供视觉反馈以改变身体轴的主观方向是否会影响 SBT 表现。我们发现,即使实际身体角度相同,SVBA 任务中的反馈也会显著改变 SBT 角度。SVBA 和 SBT 表现之间的观察到的关联支持了在身体几乎直立时,身体倾斜和自我中心估计的至少部分共同机制。