Stone L S, Perrone J A
Flight Management and Human Factors Division, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA 94035-1000, USA.
Vision Res. 1997 Mar;37(5):573-90. doi: 10.1016/s0042-6989(96)00204-0.
Recent studies have suggested that humans cannot estimate their direction of forward translation (heading) from the resulting retinal motion (flow field) alone when rotation rates are higher than approximately 1 deg/sec. It has been argued that either oculomotor or static depth cues are necessary to disambiguate the rotational and translational components of the flow field and, thus, to support accurate heading estimation. We have re-examined this issue using visually simulated motion along a curved path towards a layout of random points as the stimulus. Our data show that, in this curvilinear motion paradigm, five of six observers could estimate their heading relatively accurately and precisely (error and uncertainty < approximately 4 deg), even for rotation rates as high as 16 deg/sec, without the benefit of either oculomotor or static depth cues signaling rotation rate. Such performance is inconsistent with models of human self-motion estimation that require rotation information from sources other than the flow field to cancel the rotational flow.
最近的研究表明,当旋转速度高于约1度/秒时,人类仅根据视网膜运动(流场)无法估计其向前平移的方向(航向)。有人认为,眼动或静态深度线索对于区分流场的旋转和平移分量是必要的,从而支持准确的航向估计。我们使用沿着弯曲路径朝向随机点布局的视觉模拟运动作为刺激重新审视了这个问题。我们的数据表明,在这种曲线运动范式中,六名观察者中有五名能够相对准确和精确地估计他们的航向(误差和不确定性<约4度),即使对于高达16度/秒的旋转速度也是如此,而无需眼动或静态深度线索来指示旋转速度。这种表现与人类自我运动估计模型不一致,该模型需要来自流场以外来源的旋转信息来抵消旋转流。