Flanagan J R, Wing A M, Allison S, Spenceley A
MRC Applied Psychology Unit, Cambridge, England.
Percept Psychophys. 1995 Apr;57(3):282-90. doi: 10.3758/bf03213054.
In this paper, we show that, when lifting an object using a precision grip with the distal pads of the thumb and index finger at its sides, the perceived weight depends on the object's surface texture. The smoother the surface texture, the greater the perceived weight. We suggest that a smoother object is judged to be heavier because the grip force, normal to the surface, required to prevent it from slipping is greater. The possibility of there being an influence of surface texture per se is excluded by a second experiment that employed a variant of the precision grip in which the thumb supports the weight of the object from underneath. With the grip oriented in this way, there is no need to match grip force to surface texture and, under these conditions, there is no effect of surface texture on weight perception. In the first two experiments, the test and comparison weights were lifted successively by the same hand. In a third experiment, the effect of surface texture was replicated for sequential lifts made with separate hands. Thus, the effect is not restricted to comparisons made with the same hand.
在本文中,我们表明,当用拇指和食指的远端指腹在物体两侧采用精确抓握方式提起物体时,所感知到的重量取决于物体的表面纹理。表面纹理越光滑,所感知到的重量就越大。我们认为,较光滑的物体被判断为更重,是因为防止其滑落所需的垂直于表面的握力更大。第二项实验排除了表面纹理本身存在影响的可能性,该实验采用了一种精确抓握的变体,即拇指从物体下方支撑其重量。以这种方式抓握时,无需使握力与表面纹理相匹配,在这些条件下,表面纹理对重量感知没有影响。在前两项实验中,测试重量和对比重量由同一只手依次提起。在第三项实验中,用不同的手依次提起物体时,表面纹理的影响得到了重复验证。因此,这种影响并不局限于用同一只手进行的比较。