- Supervisor
-
Mel Goodale, PhD, FRSC, FRS
- The Brain and Mind Institute - The University of Western Ontario
- Date and time
-
Wednesday, May 3, 2017
at
3:00 PM
- Istituti Biologici (Strada Le Grazie 8) - Aula F
- Contact person
-
Carlo Alberto Marzi
- Publication date
-
March 13, 2017
- Department
-
Neurosciences, Biomedicine and Movement Sciences
Summary
Size constancy in perception refers to the fact that people report an object to be the same size regardless of viewing distance. Size constancy is also evident in grasping: people scale their grip aperture to the real size of a goal object regardless of viewing distance.
In both cases, size constancy is achieved by calibrating retinal image size of an object by its viewing distance. In near space, both visual and proprioceptive cues can provide information about the distance of an object. What is not known is whether or not the same cues are used to calibrate size constancy for perceptual judgements and grasping.
To address this question, we asked participants either to grasp or to manually estimate the size of spheres presented at different distances when different visual and proprioceptive cues were available. Our results suggest that proprioception can support size constancy for grasping when visual distance cues are severely limited, but cannot support size constancy for perceptual judgements. These results also converge on neuropsychological evidence suggesting that the neural substrates for size constancy in perception and action are quite different.