Linguistic labels cue biological motion perception and misperception.

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 26-08-2021
Journal Scientific Reports
Article number 17239
Volume | Issue number 11
Number of pages 14
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam Center for Language and Communication (ACLC)
Abstract
Linguistic labels exert a particularly strong top-down influence on perception. The potency of this influence has been ascribed to their ability to evoke category-diagnostic features of concepts. In doing this, they facilitate the formation of a perceptual template concordant with those features, effectively biasing perceptual activation towards the labelled category. In this study, we employ a cueing paradigm with moving, point-light stimuli across three experiments, in order to examine how the number of biological motion features (form and kinematics) encoded in lexical cues modulates the efficacy of lexical top-down influence on perception. We find that the magnitude of lexical influence on biological motion perception rises as a function of the number of biological motion-relevant features carried by both cue and target. When lexical cues encode multiple biological motion features, this influence is robust enough to mislead participants into reporting erroneous percepts, even when a masking level yielding high performance is used.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary file. - Data
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-96649-1
Other links https://osf.io/wcvk6/
Downloads
s41598-021-96649-1 (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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