Cue combination and individual differences during weight judgements using familiar and newly learned cues

被引:0
|
作者
Kristiansen, Olaf [1 ]
Scheller, Meike [1 ]
Attanayake, Annisha A. [1 ]
Bambrough, Emily A. [1 ]
Nardini, Marko [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Durham, Psychol Dept, Durham, England
来源
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS | 2025年 / 15卷 / 01期
基金
欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
INTEGRATION; PERCEPTION; MEMORY; GRIP;
D O I
10.1038/s41598-025-93947-w
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Human perception is often characterised by efficient combination of sensory signals (cues). In recent studies, people could also improve precision via newly learned cues, with applications to enhance perception in healthy and clinical groups. However, it is unclear whether new cues can enhance manual object interactions. To study how new cues are used for object weight perception, people compared weights of containers. With haptic information plus the familiar visual cue of volume, participants showed precision improvements indicating cue combination. By contrast, a group of participants briefly trained with a novel visual cue to weight (line orientation) did not show improvements expected from combination. We then asked whether prolonged training (12 h) with the novel cue would promote combination, testing for significant precision gains individually in six participants. Half of participants showed combination benefits, but these were not clearly related to training, as some combined cues before training. Using an illusion analogous to the size-weight illusion, we also asked whether the novel cue would become an automatic predictor of weight: two participants were susceptible to the illusion. We conclude that weight perception is susceptible to some enhancement, but subject to training effects and individual differences that are not yet understood.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 36 条
  • [11] A slippery directional slope: Individual differences in using slope as a directional cue
    Steven M. Weisberg
    Nora S. Newcombe
    Memory & Cognition, 2014, 42 : 648 - 661
  • [12] Comprehension-based language switching between newly learned languages: The role of individual differences
    Jiao, Lu
    Duan, Xiaoting
    Liu, Cong
    Chen, Baoguo
    JOURNAL OF NEUROLINGUISTICS, 2022, 61
  • [13] Multisensory Cue Combination During Navigation: Lessons Learned from Replication in Real and Virtual Environments
    Shayman, Corey S.
    Stefanucci, Jeanine K.
    Fino, Peter C.
    Creem-Regehr, Sarah H.
    2022 IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON MIXED AND AUGMENTED REALITY ADJUNCT (ISMAR-ADJUNCT 2022), 2022, : 276 - 277
  • [14] Reliance on visible speech cues during multimodal language processing: Individual and age differences
    Thompson, L.
    Garcia, E.
    Malloy, D.
    EXPERIMENTAL AGING RESEARCH, 2007, 33 (04) : 373 - 397
  • [15] Individual differences in pathogen disgust predict men's, but not women's, preferences for facial cues of weight
    Fisher, Claire I.
    Fincher, Corey L.
    Hahn, Amanda C.
    DeBruine, Lisa M.
    Jones, Benedict C.
    PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES, 2013, 55 (07) : 860 - 863
  • [16] Print exposure explains individual differences in using syntactic but not semantic cues for pronoun comprehension
    Langlois, Valerie J.
    Arnold, Jennifer E.
    COGNITION, 2020, 197
  • [17] Using individual differences to test the role of temporal and place cues in coding frequency modulation
    Whiteford, Kelly L.
    Oxenham, Andrew J.
    JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2015, 138 (05): : 3093 - 3104
  • [18] Learned predictiveness training modulates biases towards using boundary or landmark cues during navigation
    Buckley, Matthew G.
    Smith, Alastair D.
    Haselgrove, Mark
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2015, 68 (06): : 1183 - 1202
  • [19] Characterizing Brain Areas Activated During Well-Learned Versus Newly Learned Visuomotor Associations Using fMRI
    Saccone, Elizabeth
    Crewther, Sheila
    Goodale, Melvyn
    Chouinard, Philippe
    PERCEPTION, 2019, 48 : 121 - 121
  • [20] Whole brain correlates of individual differences in skin conductance responses during discriminative fear conditioning to social cues
    Vinberg, Kevin
    Rosen, Jorgen
    Kastrati, Granit
    Ahs, Fredrik
    ELIFE, 2022, 11