Applied Cognitive Psychology, Faculty for Computer Science, Engineering, and Psychology, Ulm University, Albert-Einstein-Allee 43, 89081 Ulm, Germany; Transfer Center for Neuroscience and Education (ZNL), Ulm University, Parkstraße 11, 89073 Ulm, Germany.
Applied Cognitive Psychology, Faculty for Computer Science, Engineering, and Psychology, Ulm University, Albert-Einstein-Allee 43, 89081 Ulm, Germany; Department of Psychology, Liverpool Hope University, Hope Park, Liverpool L16 9JD, UK.
Curr Biol. 2023 May 22;33(10):2104-2110.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.04.017. Epub 2023 May 1.
We investigated whether early visual input is essential for establishing the ability to use predictions in the control of actions and for perception. To successfully interact with objects, it is necessary to pre-program bodily actions such as grasping movements (feedforward control). Feedforward control requires a model for making predictions, which is typically shaped by previous sensory experience and interaction with the environment. Vision is the most crucial sense for establishing such predictions. We typically rely on visual estimations of the to-be-grasped object's size and weight in order to scale grip force and hand aperture accordingly. Size-weight expectations play a role also for perception, as evident in the size-weight illusion (SWI), in which the smaller of two equal-weight objects is misjudged to be heavier. Here, we investigated predictions for action and perception by testing the development of feedforward controlled grasping and of the SWI in young individuals surgically treated for congenital cataracts several years after birth. Surprisingly, what typically developing individuals do easily within the first years of life, namely to adeptly grasp new objects based on visually predicted properties, cataract-treated individuals did not learn after years of visual experience. Contrary, the SWI exhibited significant development. Even though the two tasks differ in substantial ways, these results may suggest a potential dissociation in using visual experience to make predictions about an object's features for perception or action. What seems a very simple task-picking up small objects-is in truth a highly complex computation that necessitates early structured visual input to develop.
我们研究了早期视觉输入对于建立在行动控制中使用预测的能力以及对于感知是否是必要的。为了成功地与物体交互,有必要预先规划身体动作,例如抓取动作(前馈控制)。前馈控制需要一个用于进行预测的模型,该模型通常由先前的感觉经验和与环境的交互来塑造。视觉是建立这种预测的最重要的感觉。我们通常依赖于对要抓取的物体的大小和重量的视觉估计,以便相应地调整握力和手孔的大小。大小重量预期在感知中也起着作用,这在大小重量错觉(SWI)中显而易见,在这种错觉中,两个等重物体中较小的一个被错误地判断为较重。在这里,我们通过测试患有先天性白内障的年轻人在出生后数年进行手术治疗后的前馈控制抓取和 SWI 的发展,来研究对动作和感知的预测。令人惊讶的是,典型发育中的个体在生命的头几年内轻松完成的事情,即根据视觉预测的属性熟练地抓取新物体,而经过多年视觉经验的白内障治疗个体却没有学会。相反,SWI 表现出明显的发展。尽管这两个任务在很多方面都有很大的不同,但这些结果可能表明,在使用视觉经验来预测物体的特征以进行感知或动作时,可能存在潜在的分离。看起来非常简单的任务——拿起小物体——实际上是一项非常复杂的计算,需要早期的结构化视觉输入来发展。