Department of Psychology, UCLA, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
Department of Statistics, UCLA, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Jul 30;19(7):e0303820. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0303820. eCollection 2024.
Although humans can recognize their body movements in point-light displays, self-recognition ability varies substantially across action types and participants. Are these variations primarily due to an awareness of visually distinct movement patterns, or to underlying factors related to motoric planning and/or individual differences? To address this question, we conducted a large-scale study in self-action recognition (N = 101). We motion captured whole-body movements of participants who performed 27 different actions across action goals and degree of motor planning. After a long delay period (~ 1 month), participants were tested in a self-recognition task: identifying their point-light action amongst three other point-light actors performing identical actions. We report a self-advantage effect from point-light actions, consistent with prior work in self-action recognition. Further, we found that self-recognition was modulated by the action complexity (associated with the degree of motor planning in performed actions) and individual differences linked to motor imagery and subclinical autism and schizotypy. Using dynamic time warping, we found sparse evidence in support of visual distinctiveness as a primary contributor to self-recognition, though speed distinctiveness negatively influenced self-recognition performance. Together, our results reveal that self-action recognition involves more than an awareness of visually distinct movements, with important implications for how the motor system may be involved.
尽管人类可以在点光显示中识别自己的身体动作,但自我识别能力因动作类型和参与者的不同而有很大差异。这些差异主要是由于对视觉上明显不同的运动模式的认识,还是由于与运动规划和/或个体差异相关的潜在因素?为了解决这个问题,我们进行了一项大规模的自我动作识别研究(N=101)。我们对参与者进行了全身动作捕捉,参与者执行了 27 种不同的动作,涉及动作目标和运动规划程度。在长时间的延迟期(约 1 个月)后,参与者在自我识别任务中进行测试:在三个其他点光演员中识别自己的点光动作,这些演员执行相同的动作。我们报告了来自点光动作的自我优势效应,与自我动作识别中的先前工作一致。此外,我们发现自我识别受到动作复杂性(与执行动作中的运动规划程度相关)和与运动意象以及亚临床自闭症和精神分裂症有关的个体差异的调节。使用动态时间规整,我们发现了支持视觉独特性作为自我识别主要贡献者的稀疏证据,尽管速度独特性对自我识别表现有负面影响。总之,我们的结果表明,自我动作识别不仅仅涉及对视觉上明显不同的运动的认识,这对运动系统如何参与其中具有重要意义。