Berkley M A, Warmath D S, Tunkl J E
J Comp Physiol Psychol. 1978 Jun;92(3):463-73. doi: 10.1037/h0077472.
Cats were trained to discriminate moving from nonmoving targets or one direction of movement from another. Various stimulus changes, e.g., size, direction, and rate, were then introduced as a test for generalization of the dimension of movement. Thresholds for detection for minimal movement were also determined. The results showed that (a) for cats, discrimination of movement is more difficult than discriminations based on brightness; (b) the dimension of movement is completely generalized across stimulus configuration but incompletely generalized for direction of movement; (c) the mean movement detection threshold was found to be 3.3 degrees/sec; (d) the thresholds for minimal movement and direction of movement were essentially identical; and (e) stimulus-viewing strategies were found to play an important role in the threshold determinations. The results of the generalization tests are consistent with the physiological properties of neurons found to be sensitive to movement in the cat visual system. The movement threshold values were found to lend support to the view that resolution and slow movement thresholds are correlated.
训练猫区分移动目标和非移动目标,或区分一个运动方向与另一个运动方向。然后引入各种刺激变化,如大小、方向和速率,作为对运动维度泛化的测试。还确定了最小运动检测的阈值。结果表明:(a)对猫来说,区分运动比基于亮度的区分更困难;(b)运动维度在刺激构型上完全泛化,但在运动方向上不完全泛化;(c)平均运动检测阈值为3.3度/秒;(d)最小运动阈值和运动方向阈值基本相同;(e)发现刺激观察策略在阈值确定中起重要作用。泛化测试的结果与在猫视觉系统中发现的对运动敏感的神经元的生理特性一致。发现运动阈值值支持分辨率和慢运动阈值相关的观点。