‘See what you feel’: The impact of visual scale distance in haptic-to-visual crossmodal matching
Olga Daneyko, Francesca Frisco, Angelo Maravita, Daniele Zavagno

TL;DR
This study examines how the distance of a visual scale affects size perception when matching haptic and visual stimuli.
Contribution
The study identifies the underestimation effect in haptic-to-visual crossmodal matching and validates the SWYF method at a comfortable peripersonal distance.
Findings
Underestimation of haptic sizes increases with visual scale distance.
SWYF is effective for haptic size perception at a comfortable peripersonal distance.
Visual-to-visual matching shows overestimation at far distances.
Abstract
Two experiments were conducted to explore the impact of the distance of a visual scale employed in the crossmodal matching method dubbed See What You Feel (SWYF) used to study the Uznadze haptic aftereffect. Previous studies reported that SWYF leads to a general underestimation of out-of-sight handheld spheres, which seems to increase with visual scale distance. Experiment 1 tested the effect of visual scale distance in haptic-to-visual crossmodal matching. A 19-step visual scale, made of actual 3D spheres (diameters ranging from 2.0 to 5.6 cm), was set at one of three possible distances (30, 160, 290 cm); participants’ task was to find the matching visual spheres for four out-of-sight handheld test spheres (diameters 3.0, 3.8, 4.6, 5.0 cm). Results confirmed the underestimation effect and only partially confirmed the role of scale distance. Experiment 2 investigated the role of scale…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMultisensory perception and integration · Tactile and Sensory Interactions · Color perception and design
