Visuotactile correlation increases the integration of visual body-related effects into action representation.

IF 2.3 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY
Hamza Sabek, Loïc P Heurley, Lionel Brunel, Hélène Vanborren, Thibaut Brouillet, Vincent Dru
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Abstract

Understanding how individuals represent their bodies in action is crucial for cognitive sciences. The theory of event coding suggests actions are coded by their perceptual effects. Yet the spatial representation of actions during simultaneous body-related effects is less understood. This study aimed to explore whether a correlation between visual and tactile effects could integrate visual information into action representations. Indeed, spatiotemporal correlation among sensory signals coming from various modalities is known to be a critical factor, especially in studies on body representations. We manipulated visual feedback by inverting it on the horizontal plane. The first group performed an induction task involving stroking a surface with a time lag between tactile and visual feedback (asynchronous group), while the second experienced no time lag (synchronous group). Participants then rated their subjective feeling of referral of touch (RoT) which corresponds to the perceived location of their index finger's tactile sensations. Subsequently, both groups completed the Simon task to assess spatial action coding. Results indicated no significant differences in RoT ratings between groups; however, the Simon task showed that the synchronous group coded responses based on the visual effects' locations, unlike the asynchronous group. Additionally, a correlation was observed between RoT ratings and the Simon task. These findings suggest that when multiple body-related action effects compete, visual effects may prevail if there is a temporal correlation between visual and tactile effects. These findings underscore the importance of spatiotemporal correlations in coding actions and support the linkage between action and body representation processes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).

视动关联增加了视觉身体相关效果与动作表征的整合。
了解个体如何在行动中表现自己的身体对认知科学至关重要。事件编码理论认为,行为是由其感知效应编码的。然而,在与身体相关的同步效应中,动作的空间表征却很少被理解。本研究旨在探讨视觉和触觉效果之间的相关性是否能将视觉信息整合到动作表征中。事实上,来自不同方式的感觉信号之间的时空相关性是一个关键因素,特别是在身体表征的研究中。我们通过在水平面上反转视觉反馈来操纵它。第一组在触觉和视觉反馈之间有一段时间滞后(异步组),而第二组则没有时间滞后(同步组)。然后,参与者对他们的主观触觉转介感(RoT)进行评分,这与他们食指触觉的感知位置相对应。随后,两组都完成了西蒙任务,以评估空间动作编码。结果显示各组间RoT评分无显著差异;然而,西蒙的任务显示,与异步组不同,同步组的反应是基于视觉效果的位置编码的。此外,还观察到RoT评分与Simon任务之间存在相关性。这些发现表明,当多种与身体相关的动作效果相互竞争时,如果视觉和触觉效果之间存在时间相关性,视觉效果可能会占上风。这些发现强调了编码动作的时空相关性的重要性,并支持动作和身体表征过程之间的联系。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
9.50%
发文量
145
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance publishes studies on perception, control of action, perceptual aspects of language processing, and related cognitive processes.
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