Flexible Orientation Tuning of Visual Representations of Human Body Postures: Evidence From Long-Term Priming

The proficiency of human observers to identify body postures is examined in three experiments. We use a posture decision task in which participants are primed with either anatomically possible or impossible postures (in the latter case the upper and lower body face in opposite directions). In a long...

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Main Authors: Karl Verfaillie, Anja Daems
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00393/full
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spelling doaj-7a921fa940a34e2f83ee1372f0dd266a2020-11-25T02:07:55ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782020-03-011110.3389/fpsyg.2020.00393505405Flexible Orientation Tuning of Visual Representations of Human Body Postures: Evidence From Long-Term PrimingKarl VerfaillieAnja DaemsThe proficiency of human observers to identify body postures is examined in three experiments. We use a posture decision task in which participants are primed with either anatomically possible or impossible postures (in the latter case the upper and lower body face in opposite directions). In a long-term priming paradigm (i.e., in an initial priming block of trials and a subsequent test phase several minutes later), we manipulate the relation between priming and test postures with respect to the identity of the person in the body postures (Experiment 1), the prototypicality of the depth orientations (Experiment 2), and the variability of the priming orientations (Experiment 3). Reaction time to the test postures is the main dependent variable. In Experiment 1 it is found that priming of postures does not depend on the exact visual appearance of the actor (either same priming and test female or male figure or different figures), supporting the hypothesis that posture priming primarily is determined by the spatial relations between the body parts and much less by characteristics of the person involved. Long-term priming in our paradigm apparently is based on the reactivation of high-level posture representations that make abstraction of the identity of the human figure. In Experiment 2 we observe that privileged or prototypical orientations (e.g., 3/4 views) do not affect long-term priming of body postures. In Experiment 3, we find that increasing or decreasing the variability between the priming and test figures influences reaction time performance. Collectively, these results provide a better understanding of the flexibility (e.g., invariant to identity) and limits (e.g., depending on depth orientation) of the processes supporting human posture recognition.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00393/fullvisual perception of body postureslong-term primingorientation dependenceactor identityprototypical
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karl Verfaillie
Anja Daems
spellingShingle Karl Verfaillie
Anja Daems
Flexible Orientation Tuning of Visual Representations of Human Body Postures: Evidence From Long-Term Priming
Frontiers in Psychology
visual perception of body postures
long-term priming
orientation dependence
actor identity
prototypical
author_facet Karl Verfaillie
Anja Daems
author_sort Karl Verfaillie
title Flexible Orientation Tuning of Visual Representations of Human Body Postures: Evidence From Long-Term Priming
title_short Flexible Orientation Tuning of Visual Representations of Human Body Postures: Evidence From Long-Term Priming
title_full Flexible Orientation Tuning of Visual Representations of Human Body Postures: Evidence From Long-Term Priming
title_fullStr Flexible Orientation Tuning of Visual Representations of Human Body Postures: Evidence From Long-Term Priming
title_full_unstemmed Flexible Orientation Tuning of Visual Representations of Human Body Postures: Evidence From Long-Term Priming
title_sort flexible orientation tuning of visual representations of human body postures: evidence from long-term priming
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2020-03-01
description The proficiency of human observers to identify body postures is examined in three experiments. We use a posture decision task in which participants are primed with either anatomically possible or impossible postures (in the latter case the upper and lower body face in opposite directions). In a long-term priming paradigm (i.e., in an initial priming block of trials and a subsequent test phase several minutes later), we manipulate the relation between priming and test postures with respect to the identity of the person in the body postures (Experiment 1), the prototypicality of the depth orientations (Experiment 2), and the variability of the priming orientations (Experiment 3). Reaction time to the test postures is the main dependent variable. In Experiment 1 it is found that priming of postures does not depend on the exact visual appearance of the actor (either same priming and test female or male figure or different figures), supporting the hypothesis that posture priming primarily is determined by the spatial relations between the body parts and much less by characteristics of the person involved. Long-term priming in our paradigm apparently is based on the reactivation of high-level posture representations that make abstraction of the identity of the human figure. In Experiment 2 we observe that privileged or prototypical orientations (e.g., 3/4 views) do not affect long-term priming of body postures. In Experiment 3, we find that increasing or decreasing the variability between the priming and test figures influences reaction time performance. Collectively, these results provide a better understanding of the flexibility (e.g., invariant to identity) and limits (e.g., depending on depth orientation) of the processes supporting human posture recognition.
topic visual perception of body postures
long-term priming
orientation dependence
actor identity
prototypical
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00393/full
work_keys_str_mv AT karlverfaillie flexibleorientationtuningofvisualrepresentationsofhumanbodyposturesevidencefromlongtermpriming
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