Publication | Open Access
Viewpoint-dependent Priming Effects in the Perception of Human Actions and Body Postures
64
Citations
61
References
1999
Year
Affective NeuroscienceHuman ModellingCognitionPerceptionAttentionPsychologySocial SciencesKinesiologyVisual CognitionPsychophysicsHuman ActionsPerception SystemHuman BodyCognitive ScienceEmbodimentEmbodied CognitionDifferent ViewpointsViewpoint-dependent Priming EffectsExperimental PsychologyPerception-action LoopSocial CognitionImpossible Body PoseBody PosturesSpatial Cognition
Abstract The identification of human actions and body postures viewed from different viewpoints was examined in four long-term priming experiments with static pictures of a human model. In Experiments 1 and 2 participants had to name or describe the pictures, and in Experiments 3 and 4 participants had to decide whether the pictures showed a possible or impossible body pose. Reliable priming effects were obtained only when priming and primed action or pose shared the same in-depth orientation (Experiments 1 and 4) and left-right reflection (Experiments 2 and 3). Having seen the same action or pose in a different orientation did not reliably facilitate identification performance later on. Also, there was no priming for poses that are impossible to perform with a human body, not even when an identical same-view prime was used. These findings suggest that the stored representations that mediate the identification of human actions and postures are viewpoint specific.
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