Smith R S, Doty R L, Burlingame G K, McKeown D A
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Percept Psychophys. 1993 Nov;54(5):649-55. doi: 10.3758/bf03211788.
Surprisingly few quantitative studies have addressed the question of whether visually impaired individuals evidence, perhaps in compensation for their loss of vision, increased acuteness in their other senses. In this experiment we sought to determine whether blind subjects outperform sighted subjects on a number of basic tests of chemosensory function. Over 50 blind and 75 sighted subjects were administered the following olfactory and gustatory tests: the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT); a 16-item odor discrimination test; and a suprathreshold taste test in which measures of taste-quality identification and ratings of the perceived intensity and pleasantness of sucrose, citric acid, sodium chloride, and caffeine were obtained. In addition, 39 blind subjects and 77 sighted subjects were administered a single staircase phenyl ethyl alcohol (PEA) odor detection threshold test. Twenty-three of the sighted subjects were employed by the Philadelphia Water Department and trained to serve on its water quality evaluation panel. The primary findings of the study were that (a) the blind subjects did not outperform sighted subjects on any test of chemosensory function and (b) the trained subjects significantly outperformed the other two groups on the odor detection, odor discrimination, and taste identification tests, and nearly outperformed the blind subjects on the UPSIT. The citric acid concentrations received larger pleasantness ratings from the trained panel members than from the blind subjects, whose ratings did not differ significantly from those of the untrained sighted subjects. Overall, the data imply that blindness, per se, has little influence on chemosensory function and add further support to the notion that specialized training enhances performance on a number of chemosensory tasks.
令人惊讶的是,很少有定量研究探讨过这样一个问题:视力受损的个体是否会为了补偿其视力丧失,而在其他感官上表现出更高的敏锐度。在本实验中,我们试图确定盲人受试者在一些化学感官功能的基本测试中是否比有视力的受试者表现更好。超过50名盲人受试者和75名有视力的受试者接受了以下嗅觉和味觉测试:宾夕法尼亚大学嗅觉识别测试(UPSIT);一项包含16个项目的气味辨别测试;以及一项阈上味觉测试,在该测试中,获取了味觉质量识别的测量结果以及蔗糖、柠檬酸、氯化钠和咖啡因的感知强度和愉悦度评级。此外,39名盲人受试者和77名有视力的受试者接受了单一的阶梯式苯乙醇(PEA)气味检测阈值测试。23名有视力的受试者受雇于费城水务局,并接受培训以服务于其水质评估小组。该研究的主要发现是:(a)盲人受试者在任何化学感官功能测试中都没有比有视力的受试者表现更好;(b)经过训练的受试者在气味检测、气味辨别和味觉识别测试中明显优于其他两组,并且在UPSIT测试中几乎优于盲人受试者。与盲人受试者相比,柠檬酸浓度从经过训练的小组成员那里获得了更高的愉悦度评级,而盲人受试者的评级与未经训练的有视力的受试者的评级没有显著差异。总体而言,数据表明失明本身对化学感官功能影响很小,并进一步支持了这样一种观点,即专门训练可以提高在一些化学感官任务上的表现。