Marotta J J, DeSouza J F, Haffenden A M, Goodale M A
Vision and Motor Control Laboratory, The University of Western Ontario, London, Canada.
Neuropsychologia. 1998 Jun;36(6):491-7. doi: 10.1016/s0028-3932(97)00154-1.
The present study tested the idea that if subjects rely more on scene-based pictorial cues when binocular cues are not available, then both their perceptual judgements and their grasp might be influenced by pictorial illusions such as the Ebbinghaus (Titchener) Circles Illusion under monocular viewing conditions. Under binocular viewing conditions, subjects were always able to scale their grip accurately to the true size of the target disc and were unaffected by the illusion. Under monocular viewing, however, subjects appeared to be influenced by the illusion. Thus, when confronted with physically different target discs displayed on backgrounds that made them appear equivalent in size, subjects treated the two discs as equivalent--even when picking them up. These results, combined with earlier work from our laboratory suggests that binocular information plays a critical role in normal human prehension but when this information is not available the visuomotor system is able to "fall back" on the remaining monocular cues, which can cause the visuomotor system to be more susceptible to pictorial illusions.
在双眼线索不可用时,如果受试者更多地依赖基于场景的图像线索,那么在单眼观察条件下,他们的感知判断和抓握可能会受到诸如埃宾浩斯(铁钦纳)圆环错觉等图像错觉的影响。在双眼观察条件下,受试者总是能够根据目标圆盘的真实大小准确调整抓握力度,且不受错觉影响。然而,在单眼观察时,受试者似乎受到了错觉的影响。因此,当面对显示在背景上、看起来大小相等但实际大小不同的目标圆盘时,受试者将这两个圆盘视为相等——即使在拿起它们的时候也是如此。这些结果与我们实验室早期的研究相结合,表明双眼信息在正常人类抓握过程中起着关键作用,但当该信息不可用时,视觉运动系统能够“转而”依靠其余的单眼线索,这可能会使视觉运动系统更容易受到图像错觉的影响。