Kessler, K. and Miellet, S., 2013. Perceiving conspecifics as integrated body-gestalts is an embodied process. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 142 (3), 774 - 790 .
Full text available as:
|
PDF (This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record)
BodyGestaltpaper1_JEPG_accepted.pdf - Accepted Version 830kB | |
Copyright to original material in this document is with the original owner(s). Access to this content through BURO is granted on condition that you use it only for research, scholarly or other non-commercial purposes. If you wish to use it for any other purposes, you must contact BU via BURO@bournemouth.ac.uk. Any third party copyright material in this document remains the property of its respective owner(s). BU grants no licence for further use of that third party material. |
DOI: 10.1037/a0029617
Abstract
We investigated the effect of posture congruence on social perception. Specifically, we tested the hypothesis that completing "body gestalts," rather than being a purely visual process, is mediated by congruence in the postures of observer and stimulus. We developed novel stimuli showing a face and 2 hands that could be combined in various ways to form "body gestalts" implying different postures. In 3 experiments we found that imitative finger movements were consistently faster when the observer's posture matched the posture implied by the configuration of face and hands shown onscreen, suggesting that participants intuitively used their own body schema to "fill in the gaps" in the stimuli. Besides shaping how humans perceive others' bodies, embodied body-gestalt (eBG) completion may be an essential social and survival mechanism, for example, allowing for quick recovery from deceptive actions. It may also partly explain why humans subconsciously align themselves in everyday interactions: This might facilitate optimal corepresentation at higher, conscious levels.
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
ISSN: | 0096-3445 |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Adult ; Female ; Human Body ; Humans ; Male ; Photic Stimulation ; Reaction Time ; Social Perception ; Visual Perception |
Group: | Faculty of Science & Technology |
ID Code: | 22095 |
Deposited By: | Symplectic RT2 |
Deposited On: | 12 Jun 2015 11:09 |
Last Modified: | 14 Mar 2022 13:51 |
Downloads
Downloads per month over past year
Repository Staff Only - |