Time perception during apparent biological motion reflects subjective speed of movement, not objective rate of visual stimulation

被引:0
作者
Guido Orgs
Louise Kirsch
Patrick Haggard
机构
[1] University College London,Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience
[2] Bangor University,School of Psychology
来源
Experimental Brain Research | 2013年 / 227卷
关键词
Biological motion; Apparent motion; Time perception; Visual body perception; Duration discrimination; Action observation; Velocity perception;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We have investigated links between biological motion perception and time perception. Participants compared the durations of two paired visual frames, inside which task-irrelevant sequences of static body postures were presented. The sequences produced apparent movements of shorter and longer path lengths, depending on the sequential order of body postures (ABC or ACB). Shorter and longer path lengths were paired with shorter and longer interstimulus intervals (ISIs) to produce path/ISI congruent sequences with intermediate subjective speeds and path/ISI incongruent sequences with slowest and fastest subjective speeds. Participants compared the duration of the visual frames surrounding these sequences; body postures and biological motion were irrelevant. The ability to discriminate the duration of the frames (as measured by the just noticeable difference, JND) was reduced for pairs of path/ISI congruent sequences as compared to pairs of path/ISI incongruent sequences. That is, duration discrimination improved when implied speed differed between the two sequences of a pair compared to when the implied speed was the same. Since stimuli showed no actual movement and were fully matched for lower-level visual input and objective stimulus durations, our findings suggest an involvement of higher-order visual or even motor areas in temporal biases during apparent biological motion perception. We show that apparent speed is the primary dimension of such percepts consistent with a dominant role of movement dynamics in the perception of other people’s actions. Our results also confirm an intimate relation between time perception and processing of human movement.
引用
收藏
页码:223 / 229
页数:6
相关论文
共 124 条
  • [1] Baker CI(2001)Neuronal representation of disappearing and hidden objects in temporal cortex of the macaque Exp Brain Res 140 375-381
  • [2] Keysers C(2006)The sensitivity of primate STS neurons to walking sequences and to the degree of articulation in static images Prog Brain Res 154 135-148
  • [3] Jellema T(2008)Sensory and association cortex in time perception J Cogn Neurosci 20 1054-1062
  • [4] Wicker B(2013)Effects of speeding up or slowing down animate or inanimate motions on timing Exp Brain Res 224 581-590
  • [5] Perrett DI(2010)Tempo rubato: animacy speeds up time in the brain PLoS ONE 5 e15638-929
  • [6] Barraclough NE(1996)Configural processing in the perception of apparent biological motion J Exp Psychol Human 22 916-1767
  • [7] Xiao D(2005)Neural systems underlying observation of humanly impossible movements: an FMRI study Cereb Cortex 15 1761-136
  • [8] Oram MW(2008)Human time perception and its illusions Curr Opin Neurobiol 18 131-581
  • [9] Perrett DI(1983)The mental representation of movement when static stimuli are viewed Percept Psychophys 33 575-T32
  • [10] Bueti D(2013)Time perception of visual motion is tuned by the motor representation of human actions Sci Rep 3 1168-99