Adaptation to spectacles that alter in equivalent amounts the accommodation and the convergence with which objects are viewed was produced under two conditions. In one, S alternately pushed away or pulled toward him a screen that exhibited only a single vertical contour while wearing glaaaes that caused decreases in accommodation and convergence equivalent to 1.5 lens diopters. Here kinesthesis for these arm movements provided the only veridical distance cues, A small, but highly significant, adaptation effect was obtained with a teat in which S, before and after the adaptation period, pointed to the location of a test line in the distance dimension. Corresponding tests consisting in size and in depth estimates did not show an adaptation effect. In the other condition of adaptation, S moved objects by hand toward and away from himself while wearing spectacles that increased accommodation and convergence by the equivalent of 1.5 lens diopters. In addition to the altered oculomotor cues, some veridical visual cues for distance such as are caused by perspective were present. This condition yielded changes in size and depth estimates indicative of an adaptation in visual distance perception and a larger effect of adaptation measured by the pointing test. We concluded that the excess of the adaptation effect measured by pointing over that measured by size estimation represents an adaptation in proprioception, as did the pointing effect produced by our first adaptation condition.
[1]
Hans Wallach,et al.
Differences in the dissipation of the effect of adaptation to two kinds of field displacement during head movements
,
1972
.
[2]
H. Pick,et al.
Visual and proprioceptive adaptation to optical displacement of the visual stimulus.
,
1966,
Journal of experimental psychology.
[3]
Hans Wallach,et al.
The use of size matching to demonstrate the effectiveness of accommodation and convergence as cues for distance
,
1971
.
[4]
H. Wallach,et al.
Adaptation in distance perception based on oculomotor cues
,
1972
.
[5]
Hans Wallach,et al.
The nature of adaptation in distance perception based on oculomotor cues
,
1972
.