Li Yichen, Wang YingQiao, Boger Tal, Smith Kevin A, Gershman Samuel J, Ullman Tomer D
Department of Psychology, Harvard University.
Department of Psychology, Yale University.
J Exp Psychol Gen. 2023 Nov;152(11):3074-3086. doi: 10.1037/xge0001439. Epub 2023 Jun 12.
People make fast and reasonable predictions about the physical behavior of everyday objects. To do so, people may use principled mental shortcuts, such as object simplification, similar to models developed by engineers for real-time physical simulations. We hypothesize that people use simplified object approximations for tracking and action (the representation), as opposed to fine-grained forms for visual recognition (the representation). We used three classic psychophysical tasks (causality perception, time-to-collision, and change detection) in novel settings that dissociate body and shape. People's behavior across tasks indicates that they rely on coarse bodies for physical reasoning, which lies between convex hulls and fine-grained shapes. Our empirical and computational findings shed light on basic representations people use to understand everyday dynamics, and how these representations differ from those used for recognition. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
人们对日常物体的物理行为能做出快速且合理的预测。为此,人们可能会运用有原则的心理捷径,比如物体简化,这类似于工程师为实时物理模拟所开发的模型。我们推测,人们使用简化的物体近似来进行追踪和行动(即表征),而非用于视觉识别的精细形式(即表征)。我们在分离身体和形状的新情境中使用了三个经典的心理物理学任务(因果关系感知、碰撞时间和变化检测)。人们在各项任务中的行为表明,他们在物理推理中依赖的是介于凸包和精细形状之间的粗略身体。我们的实证和计算结果揭示了人们用于理解日常动态的基本表征,以及这些表征与用于识别的表征有何不同。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2024美国心理学会,保留所有权利)