Global form and motion processing in healthy ageing

被引:15
作者
Agnew, Hannah C. [1 ]
Phillips, Louise H. [1 ]
Pilz, Karin S. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Aberdeen, Sch Psychol, William Guild Bldg, Aberdeen AB24 3FX, Scotland
关键词
Biological motion; Ageing; Navon task; Global/local processing; AGE-RELATED DIFFERENCES; BIOLOGICAL-MOTION; VISUAL-PERCEPTION; PRECEDENCE; RECOGNITION; MECHANISMS; FEATURES; EMOTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.actpsy.2016.03.005
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The ability to perceive biological motion has been shown to deteriorate with age, and it is assumed that older adults rely more on the global form than local motion information when processing point-light walkers. Further, it has been suggested that biological motion processing in ageing is related to a form-based global processing bias. Here, we investigated the relationship between older adults' preference for form information when processing point-light actions and an age-related form-based global processing bias. In a first task, we asked older (>60 years) and younger adults (19-23 years) to sequentially match three different point-light actions; normal actions that contained local motion and global form information, scrambled actions that contained primarily local motion information, and random-position actions that contained primarily global form information. Both age groups overall performed above chance in all three conditions, and were more accurate for actions that contained global form information. For random-position actions, older adults were less accurate than younger adults but there was no age-difference for normal or scrambled actions. These results indicate that both age groups rely more on global form than local motion to match point-light actions, but can use local motion on its own to match point-light actions. In a second task, we investigated form-based global processing biases using the Navon task. In general, participants were better at discriminating the local letters but faster at discriminating global letters. Correlations showed that there was no significant linear relationship between performance in the Navon task and biological motion processing, which suggests that processing biases in form- and motion-based tasks are unrelated. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:12 / 20
页数:9
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