Suzuki K
Department of Psychology, Faculty of Humanities, Niigata University, Japan.
Perception. 1998;27(3):355-61. doi: 10.1068/p270355.
A study is reported of the binocular-oculomotor hypothesis of the moon illusion. In a dark hall, a pair of light points was presented straight ahead horizontally, and another pair was presented at the same distance but 50 degrees upward. Twenty subjects compared the spacings of these two pairs. Half of the subjects viewed the stimuli first monocularly and then binocularly, and the other half viewed them in the reverse order. Eye position was also systematically varied, either level or elevated. A spacing illusion was consistently obtained during binocular viewing (with the upper spacing seen as smaller), but no illusion arose during monocular viewing unless it was preceded by binocular viewing. Furthermore, an enhancement of the illusion due to eye elevation was found only during binocular viewing. These findings replicate the report of Taylor and Boring (1942 American Journal of Psychology 55 189-201), in which the moon was used as the stimulus, and support the binocular-oculomotor hypothesis as a partial explanation for the moon illusion.
本文报告了一项关于月亮错觉的双眼动眼假说的研究。在一个黑暗的大厅里,一对光点水平地呈现在正前方,另一对光点在相同距离但向上50度的位置呈现。20名受试者比较了这两对光点的间距。一半受试者先单眼后双眼观察刺激物,另一半受试者则以相反顺序观察。眼睛位置也系统地变化,要么是水平的,要么是抬高的。在双眼观察期间始终会出现间距错觉(上部间距看起来更小),但在单眼观察期间不会出现错觉,除非之前有双眼观察。此外,仅在双眼观察期间发现由于眼睛抬高导致错觉增强。这些发现重复了泰勒和博林(1942年《美国心理学杂志》55卷,第189 - 201页)的报告,其中以月亮作为刺激物,并支持双眼动眼假说作为对月亮错觉的部分解释。