Abstract

Of the many hand gestures that we use in communication pointing is one of the most common and powerful in its role as a visual referent that directs joint attention. While numerous studies have examined the developmental trajectory of pointing production and comprehension, very little consideration has been given to adult visual perception of hand pointing gestures. Across two studies, we use a visual adaptation paradigm to explore the mechanisms underlying the perception of proto-declarative hand pointing. Twenty eight participants judged whether 3D modeled hands pointed, in depth, at or to the left or right of a target (test angles of 0°, 0.75° and 1.5° left and right) before and after adapting to either hands or arrows which pointed 10° to the right or left of the target. After adaptation, the perception of the pointing direction of the test hands shifted with respect to the adapted direction, revealing separate mechanisms for coding right and leftward pointing directions. While there were subtle yet significant differences in the strength of adaptation to hands and arrows, both cues gave rise to a similar pattern of aftereffects. The considerable cross category adaptation found when arrows were used as adapting stimuli and the asymmetry in aftereffects to left and right hands suggests that the adaptation aftereffects are likely driven by simple orientation cues, inherent in the morphological structure of the hand, and not dependent on the biological status of the hand pointing cue. This finding provides evidence in support of a common neural mechanism that processes these directional social cues, a mechanism that may be blind to the biological status of the stimulus category.

Highlights

  • With relative ease and little reflection we readily follow numerous cues that direct our focus of attention

  • Of the various biological cues to social attention that people use, hand pointing is a meaningful social gesture that can convey a variety of communicative intentions [1]

  • This study presents, for the first time, evidence of rapid visual adaptation to hand pointing direction

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Summary

Introduction

With relative ease and little reflection we readily follow numerous cues that direct our focus of attention. These directional cues can be biological such as hand gestures, head orientation and eye gaze or symbolic non-biological cues, like arrows. Of the various biological cues to social attention that people use, hand pointing is a meaningful social gesture that can convey a variety of communicative intentions [1]. Comprehension of pointing gestures provides an integral. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. No additional funding was received for this study

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