
doi: 10.1068/p6535
pmid: 20402245
Humans can recognise human body parts haptically as well as visually. We employed a mental-rotation task to determine whether participants could adopt a third-person perspective when judging the laterality of life-like human hands. Female participants adopted either a first-person or a third-person perspective using vision (experiment 1) or haptics (experiment 2), with hands presented at various orientations within a horizontal plane. In the first-person perspective task, most participants responded more slowly as hand orientation increasingly deviated from the participant's upright orientation, regardless of modality. In the visual third-person perspective task, most participants responded more slowly as hand orientation increasingly deviated from the experimenter's upright orientation; in contrast, less than half of the participants produced this same inverted U-shaped response-time function haptically. In experiment 3, participants were explicitly instructed to adopt a third-person perspective haptically by mentally rotating the rubber hand to the experimenter's upright orientation. Most participants produced an inverted U-shaped function. Collectively, these results suggest that humans can accurately assume a third-person perspective when hands are explored haptically or visually. With less explicit instructions, however, the canonical orientation for hand representation may be more strongly influenced haptically than visually by body-based heuristics, and less easily modified by perspective instructions.
Adult, Analysis of Variance, Adolescent, Recognition, Psychology, Hand, Functional Laterality, Form Perception, Young Adult, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Orientation, Reaction Time, Humans, Female
Adult, Analysis of Variance, Adolescent, Recognition, Psychology, Hand, Functional Laterality, Form Perception, Young Adult, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Orientation, Reaction Time, Humans, Female
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