Grasping Discriminates between Object Sizes Less Not More Accurately than the Perceptual System

Vision (Basel). 2019 Jul 19;3(3):36. doi: 10.3390/vision3030036.

Abstract

Ganel, Freud, Chajut, and Algom (2012) demonstrated that maximum grip apertures (MGAs) differ significantly when grasping perceptually identical objects. From this finding they concluded that the visual size information used by the motor system is more accurate than the visual size information available to the perceptual system. A direct comparison between the accuracy in the perception and the action system is, however, problematic, given that accuracy in the perceptual task is measured using a dichotomous variable, while accuracy in the visuomotor task is determined using a continuous variable. We addressed this problem by dichotomizing the visuomotor measures. Using this approach, our results show that size discrimination in grasping is in fact inferior to perceptual discrimination therefore contradicting the original suggestion put forward by Ganel and colleagues.

Keywords: Just Noticeable Difference; Two Visual Streams Hypothesis; grasping; object size; perception-action model.