Abstract

Biological motion perception is the ability of the visual system to perceive complex human movement patterns. The previous studies have shown a direct link between attentional abilities and performance on biological motion tasks, both of which have been shown to deteriorate with age. However, it is not known whether there is a direct link between age-related deficits in biological motion processing and attention. Here, we investigated whether age-related changes in biological motion perception are mediated by impaired attentional abilities. To assess basic biological motion performance, we asked 42 younger (M = 21 years) and 39 older adults (M = 69 years) to indicate the facing direction of point-light actions. Performance did not differ between age groups. We assessed visual spatial and selective attentional abilities, using a range of tasks: conjunctive visual search, spatial cueing, and the Stroop task. Across all tasks, older adults were significantly slower to respond and exhibited larger interference/cueing effects, compared to younger adults. To assess attentional demands in relation with biological motion perception, participants performed a biological motion search task for which they had to indicate the presence of a target point-light walker among a varied number of distracters. Older adults were slower, and generally worse than younger adults at discriminating the walkers. Correlations showed that there was no significant relationship between performance in attention tasks and biological motion processing, which indicates that age-related changes in biological motion perception are unlikely to be driven by general attentional decline.

Highlights

  • Identifying and recognising the movement of others, known as biological motion perception, are an important visual ability

  • The previous research has shown a direct link between attentional abilities and performance on biological motion tasks (e.g., Thornton, Rensink & Shiffrar, 2002; Cavanagh, Labianca & Thornton, 2001; Chandrasekaran et al, 2010), both of which have been shown to change with age

  • By combining the stimuli and procedure of both Cavanagh et al (2001) and Chandrasekaran et al (2010), the present study investigated whether age-related decline in biological motion perception is mediated by impaired attentional abilities

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Summary

Introduction

Identifying and recognising the movement of others, known as biological motion perception, are an important visual ability. Point-light animations are used to study the perception of biological motion. The moving point lights could immediately be recognised as human motion. This perception is achieved by integrating the information from the local point lights into a global percept of a moving figure. A wide range of information can be extracted from point-light displays including information about their gender, identity, and the emotional state of a person (e.g., Kozlowski and Cutting, 1977; Dittrich, Troscianko, Lea & Morgan, 1996; Vanrie & Verfaille, 2004; Blake & Shiffrar, 2007; Pavlova, 2011)

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