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Intuitive physical reasoning about objects’ masses transfers to a visuomotor decision task consistent with Newtonian physics

While interacting with objects during every-day activities, e.g. when sliding a glass on a counter top, people obtain constant feedback whether they are acting in accordance with physical laws. However, classical research on intuitive physics has revealed that people’s judgements systematically devi...

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Autores principales: Neupärtl, Nils, Tatai, Fabian, Rothkopf, Constantin A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7647116/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33075051
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007730
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author Neupärtl, Nils
Tatai, Fabian
Rothkopf, Constantin A.
author_facet Neupärtl, Nils
Tatai, Fabian
Rothkopf, Constantin A.
author_sort Neupärtl, Nils
collection PubMed
description While interacting with objects during every-day activities, e.g. when sliding a glass on a counter top, people obtain constant feedback whether they are acting in accordance with physical laws. However, classical research on intuitive physics has revealed that people’s judgements systematically deviate from predictions of Newtonian physics. Recent research has explained at least some of these deviations not as consequence of misconceptions about physics but instead as the consequence of the probabilistic interaction between inevitable perceptual uncertainties and prior beliefs. How intuitive physical reasoning relates to visuomotor actions is much less known. Here, we present an experiment in which participants had to slide pucks under the influence of naturalistic friction in a simulated virtual environment. The puck was controlled by the duration of a button press, which needed to be scaled linearly with the puck’s mass and with the square-root of initial distance to reach a target. Over four phases of the experiment, uncertainties were manipulated by altering the availability of sensory feedback and providing different degrees of knowledge about the physical properties of pucks. A hierarchical Bayesian model of the visuomotor interaction task incorporating perceptual uncertainty and press-time variability found substantial evidence that subjects adjusted their button-presses so that the sliding was in accordance with Newtonian physics. After observing collisions between pucks, which were analyzed with a hierarchical Bayesian model of the perceptual observation task, subjects transferred the relative masses inferred perceptually to adjust subsequent sliding actions. Crucial in the modeling was the inclusion of a cost function, which quantitatively captures participants’ implicit sensitivity to errors due to their motor variability. Taken together, in the present experiment we find evidence that our participants transferred their intuitive physical reasoning to a subsequent visuomotor control task consistent with Newtonian physics and weighed potential outcomes with a cost functions based on their knowledge about their own variability.
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spelling pubmed-76471162020-11-16 Intuitive physical reasoning about objects’ masses transfers to a visuomotor decision task consistent with Newtonian physics Neupärtl, Nils Tatai, Fabian Rothkopf, Constantin A. PLoS Comput Biol Research Article While interacting with objects during every-day activities, e.g. when sliding a glass on a counter top, people obtain constant feedback whether they are acting in accordance with physical laws. However, classical research on intuitive physics has revealed that people’s judgements systematically deviate from predictions of Newtonian physics. Recent research has explained at least some of these deviations not as consequence of misconceptions about physics but instead as the consequence of the probabilistic interaction between inevitable perceptual uncertainties and prior beliefs. How intuitive physical reasoning relates to visuomotor actions is much less known. Here, we present an experiment in which participants had to slide pucks under the influence of naturalistic friction in a simulated virtual environment. The puck was controlled by the duration of a button press, which needed to be scaled linearly with the puck’s mass and with the square-root of initial distance to reach a target. Over four phases of the experiment, uncertainties were manipulated by altering the availability of sensory feedback and providing different degrees of knowledge about the physical properties of pucks. A hierarchical Bayesian model of the visuomotor interaction task incorporating perceptual uncertainty and press-time variability found substantial evidence that subjects adjusted their button-presses so that the sliding was in accordance with Newtonian physics. After observing collisions between pucks, which were analyzed with a hierarchical Bayesian model of the perceptual observation task, subjects transferred the relative masses inferred perceptually to adjust subsequent sliding actions. Crucial in the modeling was the inclusion of a cost function, which quantitatively captures participants’ implicit sensitivity to errors due to their motor variability. Taken together, in the present experiment we find evidence that our participants transferred their intuitive physical reasoning to a subsequent visuomotor control task consistent with Newtonian physics and weighed potential outcomes with a cost functions based on their knowledge about their own variability. Public Library of Science 2020-10-19 /pmc/articles/PMC7647116/ /pubmed/33075051 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007730 Text en © 2020 Neupärtl et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Neupärtl, Nils
Tatai, Fabian
Rothkopf, Constantin A.
Intuitive physical reasoning about objects’ masses transfers to a visuomotor decision task consistent with Newtonian physics
title Intuitive physical reasoning about objects’ masses transfers to a visuomotor decision task consistent with Newtonian physics
title_full Intuitive physical reasoning about objects’ masses transfers to a visuomotor decision task consistent with Newtonian physics
title_fullStr Intuitive physical reasoning about objects’ masses transfers to a visuomotor decision task consistent with Newtonian physics
title_full_unstemmed Intuitive physical reasoning about objects’ masses transfers to a visuomotor decision task consistent with Newtonian physics
title_short Intuitive physical reasoning about objects’ masses transfers to a visuomotor decision task consistent with Newtonian physics
title_sort intuitive physical reasoning about objects’ masses transfers to a visuomotor decision task consistent with newtonian physics
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7647116/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33075051
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007730
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