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Discrimination Between Biological Motion with and Without Social Intention: a Pilot Study Using Visual Scanning in Healthy Adults

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2013 Feb 5
PMID 23376597
Citations 3
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Abstract

Human beings have a detailed understanding of others' action and body language allowing them to adapt their behaviour for effective social interaction. A proper selection of human motion deserving a social intention over the many human motion surrounding them may be executed by overt visual-spatial attention. The aim of this study was to characterize eye movements in 32 healthy adults while exploring Social and Non-social human biological motion using an eye tracking method according to two paradigms. The "preferential looking paradigm" revealed that the first fixation is more often on the Non-social Motion than Social Motion but the first fixations duration are longer on Social Motion. Moreover, with the same paradigm, subjects spent a greater looking time percentage on Social Motion than Non-social Motion, no matter whether discrimination between categories was asked for or not. In the "blocks paradigm" the looking time percentage varied by the body parts (chests, pelvis and legs) and its distribution was different between categories. Eye movements revealed a spontaneous, fast and durable bias of overt visual-spatial attention favouring the perception of Social Motion and a different visual scanpath for Social compared to Non-social human biological motion. These findings constitute a basis for the investigation of a 'social intention' bias in perception of human biological motion.

Citing Articles

"Motion or Emotion? Recognition of Emotional Bodily Expressions in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder With and Without Intellectual Disability".

Mazzoni N, Landi I, Ricciardelli P, Actis-Grosso R, Venuti P Front Psychol. 2020; 11:478.

PMID: 32269539 PMC: 7109394. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00478.


Prediction of Biological Motion Perception Performance from Intrinsic Brain Network Regional Efficiency.

Wang Z, Zhang D, Liang B, Chang S, Pan J, Huang R Front Hum Neurosci. 2016; 10:552.

PMID: 27853427 PMC: 5090005. DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2016.00552.


Human infants detect other people's interactions based on complex patterns of kinematic information.

Galazka M, Roche L, Nystrom P, Falck-Ytter T PLoS One. 2014; 9(11):e112432.

PMID: 25409449 PMC: 4237354. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0112432.