Isolating shape from semantics in haptic-visual priming

被引:0
作者
Ana Pesquita
Allison A. Brennan
James T. Enns
Salvador Soto-Faraco
机构
[1] University of British Columbia,Department of Psychology
[2] Universitat Pompeu Fabra,Departament de Tecnologies de la Informació i les Comunicacions
来源
Experimental Brain Research | 2013年 / 227卷
关键词
Multisensory; Vision; Haptic; Cross-modal; Priming; Weighted decisions;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The exploration of a familiar object by hand can benefit its identification by eye. What is unclear is how much this multisensory cross-talk reflects shared shape representations versus generic semantic associations. Here, we compare several simultaneous priming conditions to isolate the potential contributions of shape and semantics in haptic-to-visual priming. Participants explored a familiar object manually (haptic prime) while trying to name a visual object that was gradually revealed in increments of spatial resolution. Shape priming was isolated in a comparison of identity priming (shared semantic category and shape) with category priming (same category, but different shapes). Semantic priming was indexed by the comparisons of category priming with unrelated haptic primes. The results showed that both factors mediated priming, but that their relative weights depended on the reliability of the visual information. Semantic priming dominated in Experiment 1, when participants were free to use high-resolution visual information, but shape priming played a stronger role in Experiment 2, when participants were forced to respond with less reliable visual information. These results support the structural description hypothesis of haptic-visual priming (Reales and Ballesteros in J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 25:644–663, 1999) and are also consistent with the optimal integration theory (Ernst and Banks in Nature 415:429–433, 2002), which proposes a close coupling between the reliability of sensory signals and their weight in decision making.
引用
收藏
页码:311 / 322
页数:11
相关论文
共 134 条
  • [1] Amedi A(2001)Visuo-haptic object-related activation in the ventral visual pathway Nat Neurosci 4 324-330
  • [2] Malach R(2005)Functional imaging of human crossmodal identification and object recognition Exp Brain Res 166 559-571
  • [3] Hendler T(2009)Cross-modal repetition priming in young and old adults Eur J Cogn Psychol 21 366-387
  • [4] Peled S(1987)Recognition-by-components: a theory of human image understanding Psychol Rev 94 115-147
  • [5] Zohary E(1991)Evidence for complete translational and reflectional invariance in visual object priming Perception 20 585-593
  • [6] Amedi A(2009)Biederman and Cooper’s 1991 paper translational and reflectional priming invariance: a retrospective Perception 38 809-826
  • [7] von Kriegstein K(1999)Children’s haptic and cross-modal recognition with familiar and unfamiliar objects J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 25 1867-1881
  • [8] van Atteveldt NM(1982)Words, pictures, and priming: on semantic activation, conscious identification, and the automaticity of information processing J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 8 757-777
  • [9] Beauchamp MS(2008)Repetition priming and the haptic recognition of familiar and unfamiliar objects Percept Psychophys 70 1350-1365
  • [10] Naumer MJ(2009)Size-sensitive perceptual representations underlie visual and haptic object recognition PLoS ONE 4 e8009-410