Saccone Elizabeth J, Szpak Ancret, Churches Owen, Nicholls Michael E R
College of Education, Psychology and Social Work, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA, 5001, Australia.
School of Psychological and Public Health, La Trobe University, Edwards Road, Flora Hill, Bendigo, VIC, 3552, Australia.
Atten Percept Psychophys. 2018 Jan;80(1):54-68. doi: 10.3758/s13414-017-1413-7.
Research suggests that the human brain codes manipulable objects as possibilities for action, or affordances, particularly objects close to the body. Near-body space is not only a zone for body-environment interaction but also is socially relevant, as we are driven to preserve our near-body, personal space from others. The current, novel study investigated how close proximity of a stranger modulates visuomotor processing of object affordances in shared, social space. Participants performed a behavioural object recognition task both alone and with a human confederate. All object images were in participants' reachable space but appeared relatively closer to the participant or the confederate. Results revealed when participants were alone, objects in both locations produced an affordance congruency effect but when the confederate was present, only objects nearer the participant elicited the effect. Findings suggest space is divided between strangers to preserve independent near-body space boundaries, and in turn this process influences motor coding for stimuli within that social space. To demonstrate that this visuomotor modulation represents a social phenomenon, rather than a general, attentional effect, two subsequent experiments employed nonhuman joint conditions. Neither a small, Japanese, waving cat statue (Experiment 2) nor a metronome (Experiment 3) modulated the affordance effect as in Experiment 1. These findings suggest a truly social explanation of the key interaction from Experiment 1. This study represents an important step toward understanding object affordance processing in real-world, social contexts and has implications broadly across fields of social action and cognition, and body space representation.
研究表明,人类大脑将可操控的物体编码为行动的可能性或可供性,尤其是靠近身体的物体。身体附近空间不仅是身体与环境相互作用的区域,而且具有社会相关性,因为我们会努力保护自己身体附近的个人空间不被他人侵犯。当前这项新颖的研究调查了陌生人的近距离如何在共享的社会空间中调节物体可供性的视觉运动处理。参与者单独以及与一名人类同伙一起执行一项行为物体识别任务。所有物体图像都在参与者可触及的空间内,但相对而言,它们离参与者或同伙更近。结果显示,当参与者单独时,两个位置的物体都产生了可供性一致性效应,但当同伙在场时,只有离参与者较近的物体才会引发这种效应。研究结果表明,陌生人之间会划分空间以保护各自独立的身体附近空间边界,而这一过程反过来又会影响该社会空间内刺激的运动编码。为了证明这种视觉运动调节代表一种社会现象,而非一般的注意力效应,随后的两个实验采用了非人类的联合条件。无论是一个小型的、会挥手的日本猫咪雕像(实验2)还是一个节拍器(实验3),都没有像实验1那样调节可供性效应。这些发现为实验1中的关键相互作用提供了一个真正的社会性解释。这项研究朝着理解现实世界社会背景下的物体可供性处理迈出了重要一步,并且在社会行动与认知以及身体空间表征等广泛领域都具有重要意义。