Renet Christian, Randall William, Guterstam Arvid
Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, United States.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2024 Aug 9;18:1444428. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2024.1444428. eCollection 2024.
Recent work suggests that our brains may generate subtle, false motion signals streaming from other people to the objects of their attention, aiding social cognition. For instance, brief exposure to static images depicting other people gazing at objects made subjects slower at detecting subsequent motion in the direction of gaze, suggesting that looking at someone else's gaze caused a directional motion adaptation. Here we confirm, using a more stringent method, that viewing static images of another person gazing in a particular direction, at an object, produced motion aftereffects in the opposite direction. The aftereffect was manifested as a change in perceptual decision threshold for detecting left vs. right motion. The effect disappeared when the person was looking away from the object. These findings suggest that the attentive gaze of others is encoded as an implied agent-to-object motion that is sufficiently robust to cause genuine motion aftereffects, though subtle enough to remain subthreshold.
最近的研究表明,我们的大脑可能会产生微妙的、虚假的运动信号,这些信号从他人流向他们所关注的物体,从而有助于社会认知。例如,短暂接触描绘他人注视物体的静态图像会使受试者在检测随后沿注视方向的运动时速度变慢,这表明看着别人的注视会引起方向运动适应。在这里,我们使用一种更严格的方法证实,观看另一个人朝着特定方向注视物体的静态图像会产生相反方向的运动后效。后效表现为检测左右运动的感知决策阈值的变化。当这个人看向远离物体的方向时,这种效果就会消失。这些发现表明,他人的专注注视被编码为一种隐含的从主体到物体的运动,这种运动足够强烈,足以引起真正的运动后效,尽管微妙到仍处于阈值以下。