Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology, The University of Tokyo, 4-6-1 Komaba, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 153-8904, Japan.
School of Interdisciplinary Mathematical Science, Meiji University, 4-21-1 Nakano, Nakano-ku, Tokyo, 164-8525, Japan.
Sci Rep. 2024 Aug 13;14(1):18789. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-69535-9.
Motor contagions refer to implicit effects induced by the observation of actions made by others on one's own actions. A plethora of studies conducted over the last two decades have demonstrated that both observed and predicted actions can induce various kinds of motor contagions in a human observer. However, motor contagions have always been investigated with regard to different features of an observed action, and it remains unclear whether the background environment in which an observed action takes place modulates motor contagions as well. Here, we investigated participant movements in an empirical hand steering task during which the participants were required to move a cursor through a visual channel after being presented with videos of an actor performing the same task. We manipulated the congruency between the actions shown in the video and the background channels and examined whether and how they affected the participants' own movements. We observed a clear interaction between the observed action and its background. The movement time of the participants' actions tended to increase or decrease depending on whether they observed a faster or slower movement, respectively, and these changes were amplified if the background was not congruent with the action contained within it. These results suggest that background information can modulate motor contagions in humans.
动作感染是指个体在观察他人动作时对自身动作产生的无意识影响。在过去的二十年中,大量研究表明,被观察到的和被预测到的动作都会在人类观察者身上引起各种类型的动作感染。然而,动作感染一直以来都是针对观察到的动作的不同特征进行研究的,目前尚不清楚观察到的动作所处的背景环境是否也会调节动作感染。在这里,我们在一个经验性的手控转向任务中研究了参与者的动作,在该任务中,参与者在观看演员执行相同任务的视频后,需要通过视觉通道移动光标。我们操纵了视频中显示的动作与背景通道之间的一致性,并检查了它们是否以及如何影响参与者自己的动作。我们观察到观察到的动作与其背景之间存在明显的相互作用。参与者的动作时间往往会随着他们观察到的动作是更快还是更慢而增加或减少,如果背景与其中包含的动作不一致,这些变化会放大。这些结果表明,背景信息可以调节人类的动作感染。