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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Manual matching of perceived surface orientation is affected by arm posture: evidence of calibration between proprioception and visual experience in near space

Zhi Li, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2012 - 
- Vol. 216, Iss: 2, pp 299-309
TLDR
Two claims are supported: (1) manual orientation matching to visual surfaces is based on manual proprioception and (2) calibration between visual and proprioceptive experiences guarantees relatively accurate manual matching for surfaces within reach, despite systematic visual biases in perceived surface orientation.
Abstract
Proprioception of hand orientation (orientation production using the hand) is compared with manual matching of visual orientation (visual surface matching using the hand) in two experiments. In experiment 1, using self-selected arm postures, the proportions of wrist and elbow flexion spontaneously used to orient the pitch of the hand (20 and 80%, respectively) are relatively similar across both manual matching tasks and manual orientation production tasks for most participants. Proprioceptive error closely matched perceptual biases previously reported for visual orientation perception, suggesting calibration of proprioception to visual biases. A minority of participants, who attempted to use primarily wrist flexion while holding the forearm horizontal, performed poorly at the manual matching task, consistent with proprioceptive error caused by biomechanical constraints of their self-selected posture. In experiment 2, postural choices were constrained to primarily wrist or elbow flexion without imposing biomechanical constraints (using a raised forearm). Identical relative offsets were found between the two constraint groups in manual matching and manual orientation production. The results support two claims: (1) manual orientation matching to visual surfaces is based on manual proprioception and (2) calibration between visual and proprioceptive experiences guarantees relatively accurate manual matching for surfaces within reach, despite systematic visual biases in perceived surface orientation.

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The social psychology of perception experiments: hills, backpacks, glucose, and the problem of generalizability.

TL;DR: Three different assessments of experimental demand indicate that even when the physical environment is naturalistic, and the goal of the main experimental manipulation was primarily concealed, artificial aspects of the social environment may still be primarily responsible for altered judgments of hill orientation.
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On the anisotropy of perceived ground extents and the interpretation of walked distance as a measure of perception.

TL;DR: It is concluded that walking measures are calibrated for perceived egocentric distance, but that pantomime walking measures may suffer range compression.
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A comparison of two theories of perceived distance on the ground plane: The angular expansion hypothesis and the intrinsic bias hypothesis

TL;DR: While the intrinsic bias hypothesis is proposed only for explaining distance biases, the angular expansion hypothesis provides accounts for a broader range of spatial biases.

Why Do Hills Look So Steep

Frank H. Durgin, +1 more
TL;DR: This chapter reviews current knowledge of the phenomenology of slant misperception in relation to both functionalist and mechanistic accounts of this perceptual bias with respect to not only slant, but also other angular variables relevant to the biological measurement of surface layout.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Aspects of body self-calibration

TL;DR: The normal mechanisms of the authors' position sense and calibration of their kinaesthetic, visual and auditory sensory systems are discussed, and the adaptations that take place to transient Coriolis forces generated during passive body rotation are explored.
Journal ArticleDOI

The perception of surface orientation from multiple sources of optical information

TL;DR: It was found that the deformations of shading and/or highlights produced levels of performance similar to those obtained for the optical deformation of textured surfaces, suggesting that the human visual system utilizes a much richer array of optical information to support its perception of shape than is typically appreciated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mapping Proprioception across a 2D Horizontal Workspace

TL;DR: The results of this study provide a systematic map of proprioceptive acuity and bias across the workspace of the limb that may be used to augment computational models of sensory-motor control, and to inform clinical assessment of sensory function in patients with sensory-Motor deficits.
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