Abstract

Binocular rivalry is a visual phenomenon in which perception alternates between two different monocular images presented to each of the two eyes. Here, we propose using this phenomenon as a method to study the relation between action execution and action perception. In our experiment, a simple background (a checkerboard) was contrasted with a video representing a hand continuously grasping and releasing a ball. In Experiment 1, our subjects were asked to reproduce the perceived movement with their right hand whenever they became aware of it and to stop doing this when the checkerboard dominated. Our results revealed that motor imitation of the perceived action significantly increased the time spent perceiving the hand. Three control experiments showed that these effects were not due to a generic involvement of focused attention (Experiment 2 and 3), to a verbal description of the performed action (Experiment 3) or to the execution of an unrelated movement of the hand (Experiment 4). Although an intrinsic connection between action execution and attention cannot be excluded with certainty, and the boundary between action imitation and unrelated action execution may vary along various degrees of similarity, on the whole, the present results seem to suggest, at least on a preliminary basis, that action imitation do play a relevant role in the perception of action. We discuss these findings in the frame of current theories concerning the relation between perception and action.

Highlights

  • IntroductionWhen two conflicting images are presented to each eye using different techniques (e.g. a stereoscope, anaglyph spectacles or crossing the two eyes until the two images are superimposed), the two images spontaneously start to alternate every few seconds, rivaling each other for exclusive dominance in perceptual awareness.This phenomenon, called binocular rivalry has been mainly studied in the attempt to locate its source in the multiple levels of the cognitive hierarchy [1]

  • When two conflicting images are presented to each eye using different techniques, the two images spontaneously start to alternate every few seconds, rivaling each other for exclusive dominance in perceptual awareness.This phenomenon, called binocular rivalry has been mainly studied in the attempt to locate its source in the multiple levels of the cognitive hierarchy [1]

  • Experiment 1 The analysis revealed a main effect of the Condition factor (F(1,8) = 18.483; p,0.001; gp2 = 0.698): the ‘‘dynamic stimulus’’ dominated for longer durations in the ‘‘task execution condition’’ (DI mean: 0.45560.069) compared to the ‘‘observation condition’’ (DI mean: 0.13860.063; see Fig. 2a)

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Summary

Introduction

When two conflicting images are presented to each eye using different techniques (e.g. a stereoscope, anaglyph spectacles or crossing the two eyes until the two images are superimposed), the two images spontaneously start to alternate every few seconds, rivaling each other for exclusive dominance in perceptual awareness.This phenomenon, called binocular rivalry has been mainly studied in the attempt to locate its source in the multiple levels of the cognitive hierarchy [1]. Binocular rivalry has been used to demonstrate that personality traits (e.g. general anxiety) [18,19,20], the positive or negative overt affective value of the rival images presented [21,22,23], and even learned affective information or ‘‘gossip’’ (personality traits contingently and randomly associated with completely unknown faces [24]) can influence the rate of the alternation of the perceived images and their relative period of dominance. The researcher’s interest is not in discovering the structure of the phenomenon in itself, but rather in using it as a dependent variable, a sort of perceptual unit of measurement for quantifying how different variables may directly influence the way we select images and, more broadly, perceive the world.

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