| Literature DB >> 29854379 |
Parker Crutchfield1, Vanessa Pazdernik2, Gina Hansen3, Jacob Malone3, Molly Wagenknecht3.
Abstract
Oral size perception is not veridical, and there is disagreement on whether this nonveridicality tends to underestimate or overestimate size. Further, being hungry has been shown to affect oral size perception. In this study, we investigated the effect of hunger on oral size perception. Overall, being hungry had a small but significant effect on oral size perception and seemed to support that oral size perception tends to underestimate the size of objects. Both hungry and sated participants tended to underestimate the size of intraoral objects, but hungry participants underestimated to a significantly lesser degree. Unlike previous research, this tendency was independent of the order and number of assessments of size. We, therefore, offer a novel explanation for these findings: Oral size perception is modulated by a hierarchy of Bayesian predictions, and being hungry changes the priors in these predictions.Entities:
Keywords: hunger; oral perception; predictive coding
Year: 2018 PMID: 29854379 PMCID: PMC5968662 DOI: 10.1177/2041669518777513
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iperception ISSN: 2041-6695
Size of Spheres Used in Inches and Millimeters.
| Sphere size | ||
|---|---|---|
| Assessment used | 1/16 in. | mm |
| No | 1 | 1.6 |
| No | 2 | 3.2 |
| Yes | 3 | 4.8 |
| Yes | 4 | 6.4 |
| Yes | 5 | 7.9 |
| Yes | 6 | 9.5 |
| No | 7 | 11.1 |
| No | 8 | 12.7 |
Veridicality Distribution and Differences Between the Estimated Sphere Size and Actual Sphere Size of All Assessments for Both Groups and Assessment Modalities.
| Size (1/16 in.) | Assessment modality | Group | Underestimate | Veridical | Overestimate | Difference (estimate − actual) [95% CI] |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | Digital | Control | 7 (22%) | 18 (56%) | 7 (22%) | 0.00 [−0.25, 0.25] | >.99 |
| Experimental | 5 (16%) | 16 (50%) | 11 (34%) | 0.25 [0.00, 0.50] | .048 | ||
| Visual | Control | 7 (22%) | 24 (75%) | 1 (3%) | −0.19 [−0.44, 0.06] | .14 | |
| Experimental | 4 (13%) | 22 (69%) | 6 (19%) | 0.13 [−0.12, 0.37] | .32 | ||
| 4 | Digital | Control | 12 (38%) | 19 (59%) | 1 (3%) | −0.41 [−0.65, −0.16] | .001 |
| Experimental | 13 (41%) | 12 (38%) | 7 (22%) | −0.16 [−0.40, 0.09] | .22 | ||
| Visual | Control | 25 (78%) | 7 (22%) | 0 (0%) | −0.97 [−1.22, −0.72] | <.001 | |
| Experimental | 23 (72%) | 8 (25%) | 1 (3%) | −0.78 [−1.03, −0.53] | <.001 | ||
| 5 | Digital | Control | 9 (28%) | 17 (53%) | 6 (19%) | −0.09 [−0.34, 0.15] | .46 |
| Experimental | 9 (28%) | 17 (53%) | 6 (19%) | −0.09 [−0.34, 0.15] | .46 | ||
| Visual | Control | 26 (81%) | 5 (16%) | 1 (3%) | −0.88 [−1.12, −0.63] | <.001 | |
| Experimental | 14 (44%) | 13 (41%) | 5 (16%) | −0.31 [−0.56, −0.06] | .01 | ||
| 6 | Digital | Control | 4 (13%) | 15 (47%) | 13 (41%) | 0.28 [0.03, 0.53] | .03 |
| Experimental | 8 (25%) | 10 (31%) | 14 (44%) | 0.16 [−0.09, 0.40] | .22 | ||
| Visual | Control | 13 (41%) | 18 (56%) | 1 (3%) | −0.47 [−0.72, −0.22] | <.001 | |
| Experimental | 11 (34%) | 16 (50%) | 5 (16%) | −0.22 [−0.47, 0.03] | .08 | ||
| Total | 190 (37%) | 237 (46%) | 85 (17%) | ||||
Note. For the difference between the estimate and actual sphere size, a value of .5 indicates overestimation of one half of a sphere. A value of −.5 indicates underestimation of one half sphere. Underestimate, veridical, and overestimate are reported as n and percentage. CI = confidence interval.
Figure 1.Comparisons between the control and experimental groups on differences between the visual (left panel) or digital assessment (right panel) estimate and intraoral sphere size by intraoral size and overall. Overall category is the mean difference between the estimate and actual size across all four different intraoral sphere sizes. *p ≤ .01.