EuroMov Digital Health in Motion, Univ. Montpellier, IMT Mines Alès, Montpellier, France.
Department of Mathematics and Living Systems Institute, Translational Research Exchange @ Exeter, College of Engineering, Mathematics and Physical Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, EX4 4QF, UK.
Psychol Res. 2021 Mar;85(2):509-519. doi: 10.1007/s00426-020-01290-8. Epub 2020 Feb 6.
For more than 4 decades, it has been shown that humans are particularly sensitive to biological motion and extract socially relevant information from it such as gender, intentions, emotions or a person's identity. A growing number of findings, however, indicate that identity perception is not always highly accurate, especially due to large inter-individual differences and a fuzzy self-recognition advantage compared to the recognition of others. Here, we investigated the self-other identification performance and sought to relate this performance to the metric properties of perceptual/physical representations of individual motor signatures. We show that identity perception ability varies substantially across individuals and is associated to the perceptual/physical motor similarities between self and other stimuli. Specifically, we found that the perceptual representations of postural signatures are veridical in the sense that closely reflects the physical postural trajectories and those similarities between people' actions elicit numerous misattributions. While, on average, people can well recognize their self-generated actions, they more frequently attribute to themselves the actions of those acting in a similar way. These findings are consistent with the common coding theory and support that perception and action are tightly linked and may modulate each other by virtue of similarity.
四十多年来,人们已经认识到人类对生物运动特别敏感,并且可以从中提取出与社会相关的信息,例如性别、意图、情绪或一个人的身份。然而,越来越多的研究结果表明,身份识别并不总是非常准确,尤其是由于个体之间存在较大差异,以及与他人的识别相比,自我识别存在模糊优势。在这里,我们研究了自我与他人的识别性能,并试图将这种性能与个体运动特征的感知/物理表示的度量属性联系起来。我们表明,身份识别能力在个体之间存在很大差异,并且与自我和他人刺激之间的感知/物理运动相似性有关。具体来说,我们发现姿势特征的感知表示是真实的,因为它非常接近地反映了物理姿势轨迹,并且人们的动作之间的相似性会引发许多错误归因。虽然人们平均可以很好地识别自己生成的动作,但他们更频繁地将自己的动作归因于以类似方式行动的人。这些发现与共同编码理论一致,并支持感知和行动紧密相连,并可以通过相似性相互调节。