Parmigiani Sara, Sebastiano Alice Rossi, Romeo Marcella, Cattaneo Luigi, Garbarini Francesca, Sinigaglia Corrado
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA.
Research, Education, and Clinical Center, Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Healthcare System, and the Sierra Pacific Mental Illness, Palo Alto, CA, 94394, USA.
Sci Rep. 2025 May 15;15(1):16878. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-00213-0.
Human motion perception is crucial for social interactions. There is evidence that this perception is influenced by the knowledge of our body and its range of movement. We run two experiments to understand how robust this influence can be. First, we compared human and clock hand motion perception through an apparent motion paradigm. Second, we used a masked priming paradigm to explore how unconscious processes affect motion perception. While the clock hand rotations were generally perceived as clockwise, the human hands were perceived as rotating clockwise and counterclockwise, and their perception was predominantly aligned with biomechanical constraints. The main finding was that this alignment persisted under visual priming for human hands but not for clock hands. The priming effect was significantly reduced when the primed direction conflicted with biomechanically possible hand movements. This suggests that body knowledge shapes motion perception, with this effect proving highly robust.
人类运动感知对于社交互动至关重要。有证据表明,这种感知会受到我们身体及其运动范围知识的影响。我们进行了两项实验,以了解这种影响的强度如何。首先,我们通过表观运动范式比较了人类手部运动感知和时钟指针运动感知。其次,我们使用掩蔽启动范式来探究无意识过程如何影响运动感知。虽然时钟指针的旋转通常被感知为顺时针方向,但人类手部的旋转被感知为顺时针和逆时针方向,并且其感知主要与生物力学限制相一致。主要发现是,这种一致性在视觉启动条件下对于人类手部仍然存在,但对于时钟指针则不然。当启动方向与生物力学上可能的手部运动相冲突时,启动效应会显著降低。这表明身体知识塑造了运动感知,并且这种效应被证明具有高度的稳健性。