Perceiving conspecifics is not purely visual: "body gestalt" completion is influenced by the body posture of the observer
K Kessler
Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology, University of Glasgow, UK
Klaus.Kessler@glasgow.ac.uk
S Miellet
Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology, University of Glasgow, UK
N Hoogenboom
Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology, University of Glasgow, UK; Institute of Clinical Neuroscience and Medical Psychology, University of Duesseldorf, Germany
When we perceive other people in our everyday encounters their bodies are often partially occluded. High-level visual areas are known to automatically complete partially occluded objects, as revealed by the classic "gestalt" phenomena. However, here we set out to investigate if "body gestalt" completion is "embodied" and not purely visual. Human observers might intuitively map their own body knowledge onto partially occluded others and thereby complete their "body gestalt" by means of posture and/or motor resonance. To this end we developed new stimuli showing a face and two hands that could either form a "body gestalt" or not. Our most important finding across five behavioural experiments was that body gestalt completion was not solely based on visual features like the classic gestalt phenomena. Responses were significantly faster when the observer's posture matched the configuration of face and hands shown on screen then. In this sense body gestalt completion is an embodied process, where humans intuitively use their own body knowledge to 'fill in the gaps' in a body stimulus. We further conclude that in our particular paradigm posture resonance was apparently more important for body gestalt completion than motor resonance—with the former being most likely mediated by proprioceptive body schema representations, while the latter by the mirror neuron system. Finally, we will also present preliminary analysis of MEG data. Our findings elucidate the mechanisms of how humans perceive others holistically and how they might implicitly align themselves in everyday social interactions to facilitate an optimal co-representation of each other.
ISSN: 2041-6695 (electronic only)
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