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DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0112539
论文题名:
Perception of Social Interactions for Spatially Scrambled Biological Motion
作者: Steven M. Thurman; Hongjing Lu
刊名: PLOS ONE
ISSN: 1932-6203
出版年: 2014
发表日期: 2014-11-18
卷: 9, 期:11
语种: 英语
英文关键词: Musculoskeletal system ; Social discrimination ; Vision ; Walking ; Behavior ; Sensory perception ; Human mobility ; Visual system
英文摘要: It is vitally important for humans to detect living creatures in the environment and to analyze their behavior to facilitate action understanding and high-level social inference. The current study employed naturalistic point-light animations to examine the ability of human observers to spontaneously identify and discriminate socially interactive behaviors between two human agents. Specifically, we investigated the importance of global body form, intrinsic joint movements, extrinsic whole-body movements, and critically, the congruency between intrinsic and extrinsic motions. Motion congruency is hypothesized to be particularly important because of the constraint it imposes on naturalistic action due to the inherent causal relationship between limb movements and whole body motion. Using a free response paradigm in Experiment 1, we discovered that many naïve observers (55%) spontaneously attributed animate and/or social traits to spatially-scrambled displays of interpersonal interaction. Total stimulus motion energy was strongly correlated with the likelihood that an observer would attribute animate/social traits, as opposed to physical/mechanical traits, to the scrambled dot stimuli. In Experiment 2, we found that participants could identify interactions between spatially-scrambled displays of human dance as long as congruency was maintained between intrinsic/extrinsic movements. Violating the motion congruency constraint resulted in chance discrimination performance for the spatially-scrambled displays. Finally, Experiment 3 showed that scrambled point-light dancing animations violating this constraint were also rated as significantly less interactive than animations with congruent intrinsic/extrinsic motion. These results demonstrate the importance of intrinsic/extrinsic motion congruency for biological motion analysis, and support a theoretical framework in which early visual filters help to detect animate agents in the environment based on several fundamental constraints. Only after satisfying these basic constraints could stimuli be evaluated for high-level social content. In this way, we posit that perceptual animacy may serve as a gateway to higher-level processes that support action understanding and social inference.
URL: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0112539&type=printable
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资源类型: 期刊论文
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/18477
Appears in Collections:过去全球变化的重建
影响、适应和脆弱性
科学计划与规划
气候变化与战略
全球变化的国际研究计划
气候减缓与适应
气候变化事实与影响

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作者单位: Department of Psychology, UCLA, Los Angeles, California, United States of America;Department of Psychology, UCLA, Los Angeles, California, United States of America;Department of Statistics, UCLA, Los Angeles, California, United States of America

Recommended Citation:
Steven M. Thurman,Hongjing Lu. Perception of Social Interactions for Spatially Scrambled Biological Motion[J]. PLOS ONE,2014-01-01,9(11)
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