| Literature DB >> 23355814 |
Christoph Teufel1, Elisabeth von dem Hagen, Kate C Plaisted-Grant, James J Edmonds, John O Ayorinde, Paul C Fletcher, Greg Davis.
Abstract
A growing consensus in social cognitive neuroscience holds that large portions of the primate visual brain are dedicated to the processing of social information, i.e., to those aspects of stimuli that are usually encountered in social interactions such as others' facial expressions, actions, and symbols. Yet, studies of social perception have mostly employed simple pictorial representations of conspecifics. These stimuli are social only in the restricted sense that they physically resemble objects with which the observer would typically interact. In an equally important sense, however, these stimuli might be regarded as "non-social": the observer knows that they are viewing pictures and might therefore not attribute current mental states to the stimuli or might do so in a qualitatively different way than in a real social interaction. Recent studies have demonstrated the importance of such higher-order conceptualization of the stimulus for social perceptual processing. Here, we assess the similarity between the various types of stimuli used in the laboratory and object classes encountered in real social interactions. We distinguish two different levels at which experimental stimuli can match social stimuli as encountered in everyday social settings: (1) the extent to which a stimulus' physical properties resemble those typically encountered in social interactions and (2) the higher-level conceptualization of the stimulus as indicating another person's mental states. We illustrate the significance of this distinction for social perception research and report new empirical evidence further highlighting the importance of mental state attribution for perceptual processing. Finally, we discuss the potential of this approach to inform studies of clinical conditions such as autism.Entities:
Keywords: autism; face perception; gaze perception; interaction; mental state attribution; social neuroscience; social perception; theory of mind
Year: 2013 PMID: 23355814 PMCID: PMC3554956 DOI: 10.3389/fnint.2012.00128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Integr Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5145
Figure 1A schematic illustration of the experimental procedure (ITI—intertrial interval; ISI—interstimulus interval). The experiment consisted of an adaptation phase and a post-adaptation test. During the adaptation phase, which consisted of repeated presentations of an adaptation stimulus, observers were adapted to a specific gaze-direction (as indicated by head-orientation). This adaptation block was then followed by a post-adaptation test, in which observers' gaze-perception was measured. Each post-adaptation test trial consisted of a test stimulus gazing to the left, straight ahead, or to the right, preceded by a top–up adaptation stimulus.
Figure 2Gaze-direction aftereffects in the Seeing and Non-Seeing condition. The left panel shows the results of the current study (without deception); in the panel on the right, results from the second experiment of our previous study (with deception; Teufel et al., 2009) are re-plotted for comparison purposes. Aftereffects were calculated by subtracting the judgment scores for the rightward adaptation from the leftward adaptation conditions. Larger gaze-direction aftereffects indicate a larger difference in the influence of adaptation on subsequent gaze-direction perception between the rightward vs. the leftward adaptation conditions.