
doi: 10.1068/p7688
pmid: 26561971
Research in the visual modality has shown that the presence of certain dynamics in the motion of an object has a strong effect on whether or not the entity is perceived as animate. Cues for animacy are, among others, self-propelled motion and direction changes that are seemingly not caused by entities external to, or in direct contact with, the moving object. The present study aimed to extend this research into the auditory domain by determining if similar dynamics could influence the perceived animacy of a sound source. In two experiments, participants were presented with single, synthetically generated ‘mosquito’ sounds moving along trajectories in space, and asked to rate how certain they were that each sound-emitting entity was alive. At a random point on a linear motion trajectory, the sound source would deviate from its initial path and speed. Results confirm findings from the visual domain that a change in the velocity of motion is positively correlated with perceived animacy, and changes in direction were found to influence animacy judgment as well. This suggests that an ability to facilitate and sustain self-movement is perceived as a living quality not only in the visual domain, but in the auditory domain as well.
Adult, Male, animacy perception, Motion Perception, audition, auditory system, auditory perception, Young Adult, auditory categorization, spatial cognition, Space Perception, Auditory Perception, Humans, Female
Adult, Male, animacy perception, Motion Perception, audition, auditory system, auditory perception, Young Adult, auditory categorization, spatial cognition, Space Perception, Auditory Perception, Humans, Female
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