From Body Form to Biological Motion: The Apparent Velocity of Human Movement Biases Subjective Time

In two experiments, we investigated time perception during apparent biological motion. Pictures of initial, intermediate, and final positions of a single movement were presented, with interstimulus intervals that were constant within trials but varied across trials. Movement paths were manipulated b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological science 2011-06, Vol.22 (6), p.712-717
Hauptverfasser: Orgs, Guido, Bestmann, Sven, Schuur, Friederike, Haggard, Patrick
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Bestmann, Sven
Schuur, Friederike
Haggard, Patrick
description In two experiments, we investigated time perception during apparent biological motion. Pictures of initial, intermediate, and final positions of a single movement were presented, with interstimulus intervals that were constant within trials but varied across trials. Movement paths were manipulated by changing the sequential order of body postures. Increasing the path length produced an increase in perceived movement velocity. To produce an implicit measure of apparent movement dynamics, we also asked participants to judge the duration of a frame surrounding the stimuli. Longer paths with higher apparent movement velocity produced shorter perceived durations. This temporal bias was attenuated for nonbody (Experiment 1) and inverted-body (Experiment 2) control stimuli. As an explanation for these findings, we propose an automatic top-down mechanism of biological-motion perception that binds successive body postures into a continuous percept of movement. We show that this mechanism is associated with velocity-dependent temporal compression. Furthermore, this mechanism operates on-line, bridging the intervals between static stimuli, and is specific to configural processing of body form.
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subjects Adult
Bias
Biological and medical sciences
Biomechanics
Body
Dance
Experimentation
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Human biology
Human body
Humans
Judgment - physiology
Kinesthesis - physiology
Kinetics
Male
Motion
Movement
Movement - physiology
Movement perception
Perception
Perceptions
Photic Stimulation
Posture
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Rectangles
Research Report
Skills
Time
Time Factors
Time Perception
Trials
Velocity
Vision
Visual perception
title From Body Form to Biological Motion: The Apparent Velocity of Human Movement Biases Subjective Time
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