Vinson David W, Jordan J Scott, Hund Alycia M
Department of Psychology, Illinois State University, Normal, IL, USA.
Cognitive and Information Sciences, School of Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts, University of California, 5200 North Lake Rd., Merced, CA, 95343, USA.
Psychol Res. 2017 Jan;81(1):66-74. doi: 10.1007/s00426-015-0714-5. Epub 2015 Oct 8.
Perceptual variables such as perceived distance contain information about future actions. Often our goals involve the integration of another's goals, such as lifting heavy objects together. The purpose of this study was to investigate how another's actions might influence one's own goal-oriented perceptions (i.e., verbal distance estimates). Using a within-subject paradigm, we replicated a well-known finding that carrying a weighted backpack results in larger distance estimates relative to not carrying a backpack. In a crucial second condition, this effect was reversed: distance estimates were significantly greater when not carrying a weighted backpack than when carrying a backpack. In this condition, participants provided distance estimates while wearing a weighted backpack during the first phase and then gave estimates while not wearing a backpack, but following an experimenter wearing a weighted backpack in the second phase. Three additional conditions systematically documented how the observation of another's actions influenced distance estimates.
诸如感知距离等感知变量包含有关未来行动的信息。我们的目标常常涉及整合他人的目标,比如一起搬运重物。本研究的目的是探究他人的行动如何可能影响一个人自身的目标导向感知(即言语距离估计)。我们采用被试内范式,重复了一个著名的发现:相对于不背背包,背着加重背包会导致更大的距离估计。在一个关键的第二种条件下,这种效应发生了逆转:不背加重背包时的距离估计显著大于背背包时的距离估计。在这种条件下,参与者在第一阶段背着加重背包时提供距离估计,然后在不背背包但在第二阶段跟随背着加重背包的实验者时给出估计。另外三个条件系统地记录了观察他人行动如何影响距离估计。