| Literature DB >> 31611833 |
Huichao Ji1, Jing Samantha Pan1.
Abstract
Throwing is an important motor skill for human survival and societal development. It has been shown that throwers could select throwable balls for themselves and ball throwability was determined by its size and weight. In this study, we investigated whether throwers could perceive ball throwability for other throwers (experimental confederates) and whether the perceived throwability for others also followed a size-weight relation. Like other types of affordances, throwability entails a scaling between the thrower and the throwing object. This requires knowledge about the thrower and the object. In this study, knowledge about the objects was gained by hefting balls of various sizes and weights; knowledge about the throwers was gained by interacting with throwers in person (Experiment 1) and by viewing videos of confederates throwing (containing kinematic and anthropometric information) or photographs of the confederates standing (containing anthropometric information; Experiment 2). By comparing observers' perceived throwability for others using various materials, we attempted to uncover whether scaling of throwability was based on kinematic or anthropometric information. In this study, participants ranked throwability of balls of various sizes and weights for confederates of different sexes and fitness levels. In all experimental conditions, observers' ranking and confederates' actual throwing performances yielded linear relationships with slopes close to 1 and moderate to high r 2 values. These suggested that participants were able to accurately perceive throwability and choose throwable balls for the confederates. The throwable balls followed a size-weight relation, where bigger balls had to weigh more to be perceived as throwable as smaller balls. Furthermore, there was no difference between throwability perception based on in-person interaction, watching videos of confederates throwing and seeing pictures of the confederates standing. This suggested that the scaling of throwability was likely to be based on anthropometric information. These results enriched our understanding of whether one could perceive the action opportunities for others, and extended the canonical Gibsonian concept of affordance to a social setting and thus could be important for understanding team coordination in sports and interpersonal action collaboration in general.Entities:
Keywords: actor-environment scaling; affordance; haptic perception; size-weight relation; throwing
Year: 2019 PMID: 31611833 PMCID: PMC6776595 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Sizes and weights of throwing objects.
| 6 cm | 19 | 29 | 45 | 70 |
| 8 cm | 45 | 70 | 108 | 168 |
| 10 cm | 70 | 108 | 168 | 261 |
| 12 cm | 108 | 168 | 259 | 402 |
FIGURE 1Throwing performance of the four selected confederates. On the y-axis was the mean throwing distances of the most throwable balls of all size groups. Error bars = 1 SE.
FIGURE 2Sizes and weights of the most throwable balls for the confederates, as thrown by themselves (circle), as ranked by themselves (triangle), and as ranked by the participants (square). Error bar = 1 SE.
FIGURE 3Mean weight preference scores of confederates actual throwing performance and participants’ perceived throwability.
FIGURE 4The perceived mean weight preference was differentiated between fitness levels and sexes. Error bars = 1 SE.
FIGURE 5Participants selected the mast throwable ball in each size group, after viewing different types of materials that depicted the confederates. The selected-as-most-throwable balls followed a size-weight relation that was the same as confederates’ actual throwing performance. Error bar = 1 SE.
Correlations between ball throwability ranking with each type of materials and actual throwing performance.
| Real Person | 0.581 | <0.001 |
| Full video | 0.542 | <0.001 |
| Partial Video | 0.491 | <0.001 |
| Photograph | 0.559 | <0.001 |
Mean weight preference scores based on participants’ ranking regressed to mean weight preference scores of actual throwing performance.
| Real person | 0.98 | 6.95 | 0.94 |
| Full video | 0.93 | 7.43 | 0.91 |
| Partial video | 0.92 | 9.33 | 0.92 |
| Photographs | 1 | 0.9 | 0.95 |