Souta Hidaka, Raffaele Tucciarelli, Salma Yusuf, Fabiana Memmolo, Sampath Rajapakse, Elena Azañón, Matthew R Longo
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引用次数: 0
摘要
当我们用手与物体互动时,我们通过皮肤来推测物体的大小。长时间接触物体会导致感知尺寸后遗效应:适应一个更大/更小的物体会使随后感知到的物体看起来比实际尺寸更小/更大。这种现象被描述为触觉效应,因为它涉及到具有运动反馈的触觉。然而,不同触觉成分在产生这种后效中的确切作用在很大程度上仍未得到充分探索。在这里,我们研究了触觉的不同方面如何影响大小感知。在用一只手适应了一个大球体和用另一只手适应了一个小球体之后,参与者触摸了两个大小相同或不同的测试球体,并判断哪一个感觉更大。在以下情况下也观察到了类似的触觉大小适应后遗效应:(a)当参与者反复抓握适配器时;(b)当参与者只是继续抓握适配器而没有进一步的手部动作时;以及(c)当参与者抓握适配器而没有手指参与时。与手掌仅仅停留在适配器上的情况相比,所有这些情况都会产生更强烈的后遗效应。我们的研究结果表明,抓握的加入明显增加了后发效应,突出了触觉相互作用在决定知觉大小适应中的关键作用。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA,保留所有权利)。
Haptic touch modulates size adaptation aftereffects on the hand.
When we interact with objects using our hands, we derive their size through our skin. Prolonged exposure to an object leads to a perceptual size aftereffect: adapting to a larger/smaller object makes a subsequently perceived object to appear smaller/larger than its actual size. This phenomenon has been described as haptic as tactile sensations with kinesthetic feedback are involved. However, the exact role of different haptic components in generating this aftereffect remains largely underexplored. Here, we investigated how different aspects of haptic touch influence size perception. After adaptation to a large sphere with one hand and a small sphere with the other, participants touched two test spheres of equal or different sizes and judged which one felt larger. Similar haptic size adaption aftereffects were observed (a) when participants repeatedly grasped on and off the adapters, (b) when they simply continued to grasp the adapters without further hand movements, and (c) when the adapters were grasped without involving the fingers. All these conditions produced stronger aftereffects than a condition where the palms were simply resting on the adapter. Our findings suggest that the inclusion of grasp markedly increased the aftereffects, highlighting the pivotal role of haptic interactions in determining perceptual size adaptation. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).