Global and Local Biases and Biological Motion Processing in Health Ageing

The ability to perceive biological motion has been shown to deteriorate with age and it is assumed that older adults rely more on the form than the local motion information when processing point-light walkers. Recently, it has been suggested that biological motion processing in ageing is related to...

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Main Authors: H.C Agnew, K.S Pilz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2014-08-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:http://ipe.sagepub.com/content/5/5/480.full.pdf
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spelling doaj-78ee589384c940fbb3908fe95387f67d2020-11-25T03:55:52ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952014-08-015548048010.1068/ii4910.1068_ii49Global and Local Biases and Biological Motion Processing in Health AgeingH.C Agnew0K.S PilzSchool of Psychology, University of Aberdeen, UKThe ability to perceive biological motion has been shown to deteriorate with age and it is assumed that older adults rely more on the form than the local motion information when processing point-light walkers. Recently, it has been suggested that biological motion processing in ageing is related to a form-based global processing bias (Insch et al 2012, Experimental Ageing Research, 38, 169-185). Here, we investigated the relationship between older adults' preference for form information when processing PLWs and an age-related form-based global processing bias. In a first task, we asked older and younger adults' to sequentially match three different point-light actions. On each trial, participants were first presented with a normal action that contained local motion and global form information, a scrambled action that contained primarily local motion information, or a random-position action that contained primarily global form information. The second stimulus was always a normal action. Participants had to indicate whether the two sequentially presented actions were the same or different. Our results show a main effect of walking condition, and an interaction between walking condition and age, as older adults performed worse for the scrambled actions. In a second task, we investigated form-based global processing biases using the Navon task and analysis revealed a general relationship between the Navon task and the processing of scrambled walkers.http://ipe.sagepub.com/content/5/5/480.full.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author H.C Agnew
K.S Pilz
spellingShingle H.C Agnew
K.S Pilz
Global and Local Biases and Biological Motion Processing in Health Ageing
i-Perception
author_facet H.C Agnew
K.S Pilz
author_sort H.C Agnew
title Global and Local Biases and Biological Motion Processing in Health Ageing
title_short Global and Local Biases and Biological Motion Processing in Health Ageing
title_full Global and Local Biases and Biological Motion Processing in Health Ageing
title_fullStr Global and Local Biases and Biological Motion Processing in Health Ageing
title_full_unstemmed Global and Local Biases and Biological Motion Processing in Health Ageing
title_sort global and local biases and biological motion processing in health ageing
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2014-08-01
description The ability to perceive biological motion has been shown to deteriorate with age and it is assumed that older adults rely more on the form than the local motion information when processing point-light walkers. Recently, it has been suggested that biological motion processing in ageing is related to a form-based global processing bias (Insch et al 2012, Experimental Ageing Research, 38, 169-185). Here, we investigated the relationship between older adults' preference for form information when processing PLWs and an age-related form-based global processing bias. In a first task, we asked older and younger adults' to sequentially match three different point-light actions. On each trial, participants were first presented with a normal action that contained local motion and global form information, a scrambled action that contained primarily local motion information, or a random-position action that contained primarily global form information. The second stimulus was always a normal action. Participants had to indicate whether the two sequentially presented actions were the same or different. Our results show a main effect of walking condition, and an interaction between walking condition and age, as older adults performed worse for the scrambled actions. In a second task, we investigated form-based global processing biases using the Navon task and analysis revealed a general relationship between the Navon task and the processing of scrambled walkers.
url http://ipe.sagepub.com/content/5/5/480.full.pdf
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