Naturalistic embodied interactions elicit intuitive physical behaviour in accordance with Newtonian physics.

IF 1.7 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY
Cognitive Neuropsychology Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Epub Date: 2021-12-08 DOI:10.1080/02643294.2021.2008890
Nils Neupärtl, Fabian Tatai, Constantin A Rothkopf
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The success of visuomotor interactions in everyday activities such as grasping or sliding a cup is inescapably governed by the laws of physics. Research on intuitive physics has predominantly investigated reasoning about objects' behaviour involving binary forced choice responses. We investigated how the type of visuomotor response influences participants' beliefs about physical quantities and their lawful relationship implicit in their active behaviour. Participants propelled pucks towards targets positioned at different distances. Analysis with a probabilistic model of interactions showed that subjects adopted the non-linear control prescribed by Newtonian physics when sliding real pucks in a virtual environment even in the absence of visual feedback. However, they used a linear heuristic when viewing the scene on a monitor and interactions were implemented through key presses. These results support the notion of probabilistic internal physics models but additionally suggest that humans can take advantage of embodied, sensorimotor, multimodal representations in physical scenarios.

自然体现的相互作用根据牛顿物理学引起直观的物理行为。
视觉运动在日常活动中的成功互动,如抓握或滑动杯子,不可避免地受到物理定律的支配。直觉物理学的研究主要是研究涉及二元强迫选择反应的物体行为的推理。我们调查了视觉运动反应的类型如何影响参与者对物理量的信念及其隐含在其活动行为中的合法关系。参与者将冰球推向不同距离的目标。通过相互作用的概率模型分析表明,即使在没有视觉反馈的情况下,受试者在虚拟环境中滑动真实冰球时也采用牛顿物理规定的非线性控制。然而,当他们在显示器上观看场景时,他们使用线性启发式,并通过按键实现交互。这些结果支持概率内部物理模型的概念,但也表明人类可以在物理场景中利用具身的、感觉运动的、多模态表征。
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
Cognitive Neuropsychology
Cognitive Neuropsychology 医学-心理学
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
11.80%
发文量
23
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Cognitive Neuropsychology is of interest to cognitive scientists and neuroscientists, neuropsychologists, neurologists, psycholinguists, speech pathologists, physiotherapists, and psychiatrists.
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