Literature DB >> 26305861

A new technique for generating disordered point-light animations for the study of biological motion perception.

Jejoong Kim, Eunice L Jung, Sang-Hun Lee, Randolph Blake.   

Abstract

Studies of biological motion perception often use stimuli depicting human actions portrayed via point-light (PL) displays. Typically, counterpart, or control, stimuli for PL biological motion are created by spatially scrambling motion trajectories of individual PL dots. Depending on the purpose of the study, however, this procedure may be inappropriate as a foil for genuine PL animations, because spatial scrambling not only disrupts coherent motion activity but also eliminates pair-wise motion relationships among dots and, unless corrected, alters the spatial spread of PL dot motions. We introduce a new technique for producing perturbed PL animations, called pair-wise shuffled motion, that preserves the elementary features of biological motion in spatial and motion energy domains and only disrupts the specific sense of global, coherent perception of biological motion. First we describe the procedure for creating pair-wise shuffled motion sequences. Next we compare unperturbed PL animations to pair-wise shuffled motion, to spatially scrambled motion, and to spatially constrained scrambled motion in terms of spatial distributions of the dots, spatiotemporal amplitude spectra derived from Fourier analysis of those sequences, and space-time motion energy associated with those perturbed animations. We then show that the results from those analyses generalize to a large family of PL animations, including the widely used PL walker. Finally we present results from a two-interval forced-choice biological-motion discrimination experiment comparing the robustness of scrambled and pair-wise shuffled motions as foil stimuli. Results from these comparisons suggest that pair-wise shuffled motion offers advantages as a foil stimulus compared to foils using the conventional scrambling technique. Pair-wise shuffled motion provides an additional, effective control display for evaluating PL biological motion perception in future psychophysical, computational, and imaging studies that focus on mechanisms of processing spatiotemporal information signifying biological motion within PL displays.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26305861      PMCID: PMC4556001          DOI: 10.1167/15.11.13

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vis        ISSN: 1534-7362            Impact factor:   2.240


  37 in total

1.  Brain areas involved in perception of biological motion.

Authors:  E Grossman; M Donnelly; R Price; D Pickens; V Morgan; G Neighbor; R Blake
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2000-09       Impact factor: 3.225

2.  The neurophysiology of human biological motion processing: a high-density electrical mapping study.

Authors:  Aaron I Krakowski; Lars A Ross; Adam C Snyder; Pejman Sehatpour; Simon P Kelly; John J Foxe
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2011-01-26       Impact factor: 6.556

3.  Perception of biological motion.

Authors:  V Ahlström; R Blake; U Ahlström
Journal:  Perception       Date:  1997       Impact factor: 1.490

4.  Ventral aspect of the visual form pathway is not critical for the perception of biological motion.

Authors:  Sharon Gilaie-Dotan; Ayse Pinar Saygin; Lauren J Lorenzi; Geraint Rees; Marlene Behrmann
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2015-01-12       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Eccentric perception of biological motion is unscalably poor.

Authors:  Hanako Ikeda; Randolph Blake; Katsumi Watanabe
Journal:  Vision Res       Date:  2005-07       Impact factor: 1.886

6.  Biological motion processing as a hallmark of social cognition.

Authors:  Marina A Pavlova
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2011-07-20       Impact factor: 5.357

7.  Action perception is intact in autism spectrum disorder.

Authors:  James P Cusack; Justin H G Williams; Peter Neri
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2015-02-04       Impact factor: 6.167

8.  Visual motion perception after brain damage: II. Deficits in form-from-motion perception.

Authors:  T Schenk; J Zihl
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  1997-09       Impact factor: 3.139

9.  Temporal "Bubbles" reveal key features for point-light biological motion perception.

Authors:  Steven M Thurman; Emily D Grossman
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2008-03-27       Impact factor: 2.240

10.  Individual differences in the perception of biological motion and fragmented figures are not correlated.

Authors:  Eunice L Jung; Asieh Zadbood; Sang-Hun Lee; Andrew J Tomarken; Randolph Blake
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2013-10-30
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  2 in total

1.  Points and Stripes: A Novel Technique for Masking Biological Motion Point-Light Stimuli.

Authors:  Georg Layher; Heiko Neumann
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-08-28

2.  Load-sensitive impairment of working memory for biological motion in schizophrenia.

Authors:  Hannah Lee; Jejoong Kim
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-10-13       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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