
Recent research shows that the body is used to scale environmental extents. We question whether the body is used to scale heights as measured by real actions (Experiments 1 and 2) or by judgments about action and extent made from a single viewpoint (Experiments 3 and 4). First, participants walked under barriers naturally, when wearing shoes, or when wearing a helmet. Participants required a larger margin of safety (they ducked at shorter heights) when they were made taller. In follow-up experiments, participants visually matched barrier heights and judged whether they could walk under them when wearing shoes or a helmet. Only the helmet decreased visually matched estimates; action judgments were no different when participants' eye height increased. The final experiment suggested that the change in matched estimates may have been due to lack of experience wearing the helmet. Overall, the results suggest that perceived height is scaled to the body and that when body height is altered, experience may moderate the rescaling of height.
Male, Walking, Body Height, Biomechanical Phenomena, Judgment, Young Adult, Discrimination, Psychological, Orientation, Space Perception, Body Image, Humans, Female, Size Perception
Male, Walking, Body Height, Biomechanical Phenomena, Judgment, Young Adult, Discrimination, Psychological, Orientation, Space Perception, Body Image, Humans, Female, Size Perception
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