Heenan Adam, Troje Nikolaus F
Queen's University, Department of Psychology, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Queen's University, Department of Psychology, Kingston, Ontario, Canada; Queen's University, School of Computing, Kingston, Ontario, Canada; Queen's University, Department of Biology, Kingston, Ontario, Canada; Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2014 Jul 2;9(7):e99902. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0099902. eCollection 2014.
Biological motion stimuli, such as orthographically projected stick figure walkers, are ambiguous about their orientation in depth. The projection of a stick figure walker oriented towards the viewer, therefore, is the same as its projection when oriented away. Even though such figures are depth-ambiguous, however, observers tend to interpret them as facing towards them more often than facing away. Some have speculated that this facing-the-viewer bias may exist for sociobiological reasons: Mistaking another human as retreating when they are actually approaching could have more severe consequences than the opposite error. Implied in this hypothesis is that the facing-towards percept of biological motion stimuli is potentially more threatening. Measures of anxiety and the facing-the-viewer bias should therefore be related, as researchers have consistently found that anxious individuals display an attentional bias towards more threatening stimuli. The goal of this study was to assess whether physical exercise (Experiment 1) or an anxiety induction/reduction task (Experiment 2) would significantly affect facing-the-viewer biases. We hypothesized that both physical exercise and progressive muscle relaxation would decrease facing-the-viewer biases for full stick figure walkers, but not for bottom- or top-half-only human stimuli, as these carry less sociobiological relevance. On the other hand, we expected that the anxiety induction task (Experiment 2) would increase facing-the-viewer biases for full stick figure walkers only. In both experiments, participants completed anxiety questionnaires, exercised on a treadmill (Experiment 1) or performed an anxiety induction/reduction task (Experiment 2), and then immediately completed a perceptual task that allowed us to assess their facing-the-viewer bias. As hypothesized, we found that physical exercise and progressive muscle relaxation reduced facing-the-viewer biases for full stick figure walkers only. Our results provide further support that the facing-the-viewer bias for biological motion stimuli is related to the sociobiological relevance of such stimuli.
生物运动刺激,比如用正投影法呈现的简笔人物行走画面,在深度方向上的朝向是不明确的。因此,一个面向观察者的简笔人物行走画面的投影,与它背向观察者时的投影是一样的。然而,尽管这类画面在深度上不明确,但观察者倾向于将它们更多地解读为面向自己,而非背向自己。一些人推测,这种面向观察者的偏向可能出于社会生物学原因:把另一个实际上正在靠近的人误判为正在离开,可能比相反的错误带来更严重的后果。这个假设暗示,对生物运动刺激的面向观察者的感知可能更具威胁性。因此,焦虑测量与面向观察者的偏向应该有关联,因为研究人员一直发现,焦虑的个体对更具威胁性的刺激表现出注意力偏向。本研究的目的是评估体育锻炼(实验1)或焦虑诱导/减轻任务(实验2)是否会显著影响面向观察者的偏向。我们假设,体育锻炼和渐进性肌肉放松都会减少对完整简笔人物行走画面的面向观察者的偏向,但对仅显示人体下半部分或上半部分的刺激则不会,因为这些刺激的社会生物学关联性较小。另一方面,我们预期焦虑诱导任务(实验2)只会增加对完整简笔人物行走画面的面向观察者的偏向。在两个实验中,参与者都完成了焦虑问卷,在跑步机上锻炼(实验1)或执行焦虑诱导/减轻任务(实验2),然后立即完成一项感知任务,使我们能够评估他们面向观察者的偏向。正如假设的那样,我们发现体育锻炼和渐进性肌肉放松仅减少了对完整简笔人物行走画面的面向观察者的偏向。我们的结果进一步支持了对生物运动刺激的面向观察者的偏向与这类刺激的社会生物学关联性有关这一观点。