Size illusion influences how we lift but not how we grasp an object

被引:2
|
作者
Brenner, E
Smeets, JBJ
机构
关键词
motor control; visual pathways; illusions; prehension; human;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Reaching out for an object is often described as consisting of two components that are based on different visual information. Information on the object's position and orientation guides the hand to the object, while information on the object's shape and size determines how the fingers move relative to the thumb to grasp it. We propose an alternative description, which consists of determining suitable positions on the object - on the basis of its shape, surface texture, and so on - and then moving one's thumb and fingers to these positions. This could lead to the same performance without requiring distinct visual information on the object's orientation or size. If so, an illusory change in size need not influence the distance between thumb and fingers when reaching out for an object. However, as the object's size is used to estimate its weight, the illusory change in size should influence the force that is exerted to lift the object. To find out whether this is so, eight subjects were asked to pick up brass disks from a fixed position straight in front of them. The illusory change in size was brought about by presenting five converging lines in two different configurations under the disks. As predicted, the illusion influenced the force used to lift the disks, but not the distance between the subjects' thumbs and fingers when reaching for the disks.
引用
收藏
页码:473 / 476
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] "How we evaluate" and "how we are evaluated"
    Hida, Mariko
    PEDIATRICS INTERNATIONAL, 2021, 63 (07) : 750 - 750
  • [22] How We Refactor, and How We Know It
    Murphy-Hill, Emerson
    Parnin, Chris
    Black, Andrew P.
    2009 31ST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SOFTWARE ENGINEERING, PROCEEDINGS, 2009, : 287 - +
  • [23] Narratives of terrorism: How we tell, how we transmit, how we understand
    Roldan Gomez, Isabel
    DAIMON-REVISTA INTERNACIONAL DE FILOSOFIA, 2021, (84): : 263 - 265
  • [24] Visual information: When and how we use it influences what we use
    Heath, Matthew
    JOURNAL OF SPORT & EXERCISE PSYCHOLOGY, 2007, 29 : S1 - S1
  • [25] Research in arts in Colombia: how we learned it, how we do it and how we teach it
    Silva Canaveral, Sandra Johana
    Herrera Zarate, Alvaro Ricardo
    IMAGEN [N] VISIBLE, 2019, : 677 - 682
  • [26] How to Lift a Heavy Object?
    丁凤丽
    中学英语园地(高二版), 2007, (03) : 25 - 26
  • [27] HOW DO WE DECIDE HOW COMFORTABLE WE ARE
    RICHARDS, LG
    JACOBSON, ID
    BULLETIN OF THE PSYCHONOMIC SOCIETY, 1976, 8 (04) : 248 - 249
  • [28] Estimation of Uterine Size: How Accurate Are We?
    Hoke, Tanya P.
    Vakili, Babak
    FEMALE PELVIC MEDICINE AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY, 2017, 23 (03): : 204 - 207
  • [29] Estimation of uterine size: How accurate are we?
    Hoke, T. P.
    Vakili, B.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 2016, 214 (04) : S470 - S471
  • [30] Gravity Influences How We Expect a Cursor to Move
    Brenner, Eli
    Houben, Milan
    Schukking, Ties
    Crowe, Emily M.
    PERCEPTION, 2022, 51 (01) : 70 - 72