Social Interactions Receive Priority to Conscious Perception

Humans are social animals, constantly engaged with other people. The importance of social thought and action is hard to overstate. However, is social information so important that it actually determines which stimuli are promoted to conscious experience and which stimuli are suppressed as invisible?...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2016-08, Vol.11 (8), p.e0160468-e0160468
Hauptverfasser: Su, Junzhu, van Boxtel, Jeroen J A, Lu, Hongjing
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van Boxtel, Jeroen J A
Lu, Hongjing
description Humans are social animals, constantly engaged with other people. The importance of social thought and action is hard to overstate. However, is social information so important that it actually determines which stimuli are promoted to conscious experience and which stimuli are suppressed as invisible? To address this question, we used a binocular rivalry paradigm, in which the two eyes receive different action stimuli. In two experiments we measured the conscious percept of rival actions and found that actions engaged in social interactions are granted preferential access to visual awareness over non-interactive actions. Lastly, an attentional task that presumably engaged the mentalizing system enhanced the priority assigned to social interactions in reaching conscious perception. We also found a positive correlation between human identification of interactive activity and the promotion of socially-relevant information to visual awareness. The present findings suggest that the visual system amplifies socially-relevant sensory information and actively promotes it to consciousness, thereby facilitating inferences about social interactions.
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subjects Analysis
Awareness
Binocular vision
Biology and Life Sciences
Brain research
Cognition & reasoning
Consciousness
Eye (anatomy)
Female
Human body
Human influences
Humans
Inference
Information systems
Interactive systems
Interpersonal Relations
Male
Medicine and Health Sciences
Perception
Photic Stimulation
Social factors
Social interactions
Social perception
Social Sciences
Stimuli
Visual Perception
Visual system
Young Adult
title Social Interactions Receive Priority to Conscious Perception
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