Remote haptic perception of slanted surfaces shows the same scale expansion as visual perception.
Identifieur interne : 000476 ( PubMed/Corpus ); précédent : 000475; suivant : 000477Remote haptic perception of slanted surfaces shows the same scale expansion as visual perception.
Auteurs : Dennis M. Shaffer ; Eric McmanamaSource :
- Attention, perception & psychophysics [ 1943-393X ] ; 2015.
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
- Adult, Arm (anatomy & histology), Body Height (physiology), Body Weights and Measures, Female, Functional Laterality, Hand, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Orientation, Reference Values, Space Perception (physiology), Surface Properties, Touch Perception (physiology), Visual Perception (physiology), Young Adult.
- MESH :
- anatomy & histology : Arm.
- physiology : Body Height, Space Perception, Touch Perception, Visual Perception.
- Adult, Body Weights and Measures, Female, Functional Laterality, Hand, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Orientation, Reference Values, Surface Properties, Young Adult.
Abstract
Previous work has shown that overestimates of geographic slant depend on the modality used (verbal or haptic). Recently, that line of reasoning has come into question for many reasons, not the least of which is that the typical method used for measuring "action" has been the use of a palm board, which is not well calibrated to any type of action toward slanted surfaces. In the present work, we investigated how a remote haptic task that has been well calibrated to action in previous work is related to verbal overestimates of slanted surfaces that are out of reach. The results show that haptic estimates are perceptually equivalent to the verbal overestimates that have been found in numerous previous studies. This work shows that the haptic perceptual system is scaled in the same way as the visual perceptual system for estimating the orientation of slanted surfaces that are out of reach.
DOI: 10.3758/s13414-014-0814-0
PubMed: 25515432
Links to Exploration step
pubmed:25515432Le document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Previous work has shown that overestimates of geographic slant depend on the modality used (verbal or haptic). Recently, that line of reasoning has come into question for many reasons, not the least of which is that the typical method used for measuring "action" has been the use of a palm board, which is not well calibrated to any type of action toward slanted surfaces. In the present work, we investigated how a remote haptic task that has been well calibrated to action in previous work is related to verbal overestimates of slanted surfaces that are out of reach. The results show that haptic estimates are perceptually equivalent to the verbal overestimates that have been found in numerous previous studies. This work shows that the haptic perceptual system is scaled in the same way as the visual perceptual system for estimating the orientation of slanted surfaces that are out of reach.</div>
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<Abstract><AbstractText>Previous work has shown that overestimates of geographic slant depend on the modality used (verbal or haptic). Recently, that line of reasoning has come into question for many reasons, not the least of which is that the typical method used for measuring "action" has been the use of a palm board, which is not well calibrated to any type of action toward slanted surfaces. In the present work, we investigated how a remote haptic task that has been well calibrated to action in previous work is related to verbal overestimates of slanted surfaces that are out of reach. The results show that haptic estimates are perceptually equivalent to the verbal overestimates that have been found in numerous previous studies. This work shows that the haptic perceptual system is scaled in the same way as the visual perceptual system for estimating the orientation of slanted surfaces that are out of reach.</AbstractText>
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