171 results on '"Chouinard, Philippe A."'
Search Results
152. A pantomiming priming study on the grasp and functional use actions of tools.
- Author
-
Kithu, Mutindi C., Saccone, Elizabeth J., Crewther, Sheila G., Goodale, Melvyn A., and Chouinard, Philippe A.
- Subjects
- *
MIME , *RECOGNITION (Psychology) , *BRAIN - Abstract
It has previously been demonstrated that tool recognition is facilitated by the repeated visual presentation of object features affording actions, such as those related to grasping and their functional use. It is unclear, however, if this can also facilitate pantomiming. Participants were presented with an image of a prime followed by a target tool and were required to pantomime the appropriate action for each one. The grasp and functional use attributes of the target tool were either the same or different to the prime. Contrary to expectations, participants were slower at pantomiming the target tool relative to the prime regardless of whether the grasp and function of the tool were the same or different—except when the prime and target tools consisted of identical images of the same exemplar. We also found a decrease in accuracy of performing functional use actions for the target tool relative to the prime when the two differed in functional use but not grasp. We reconcile differences between our findings and those that have performed priming studies on tool recognition with differences in task demands and known differences in how the brain recognises tools and performs actions to make use of them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
153. A new look at the developmental profile of visual endogenous orienting.
- Author
-
Landry, Oriane, Johnson, Katherine A., Fleming, Sarah J., Crewther, Sheila G., and Chouinard, Philippe A.
- Subjects
- *
EYE tracking , *MOTOR ability , *ATTENTION testing , *DECISION making - Abstract
• Manual and saccadic measures of attention yield different developmental profiles. • Orienting measured by saccade-to-target showed no change between ages 6 to 12. • Orienting measured by manual button press task showed age-related change. • Manual target detection tasks measure skills above and beyond endogenous attention. • Endogenous visual attention is mature by age 6. There is a long-standing assumption that covert measurement of orienting, the shifting of the "mind's eye" independent of a saccade to a location in space, is a more "pure" measure of underlying attention than overt measurement of orienting. Testing attention covertly often relies on target detection tasks, which depend on making a decision about when and where a target has appeared and what is the appropriate action, all of which are potential confounds in measuring attention in children. This study cross-sectionally examined developmental profiles at ages 6–12 years of endogenous visual orienting. We used two tasks: one that measured orienting with a traditional covert attention button press response and one that measured orienting with eye tracking to measure overt saccades. The results obtained from the two orienting tasks demonstrate that each task measures distinct underlying processes with clear developmental profiles. Orienting, when measured by overt saccades, may be mature by 6 years of age, whereas the more complex manual response selection skills required in manual reaction time covert attention tasks continue to develop through middle childhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
154. Visual hallucinations associated with multimodal hallucinations, suicide attempts and morbidity of illness in psychotic disorders.
- Author
-
Chouinard, Virginie-Anne, Shinn, Ann K., Valeri, Linda, Chouinard, Philippe A., Gardner, Margaret E., Asan, A. Esin, Cohen, Bruce M., and Öngür, Dost
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOSES , *HALLUCINATIONS , *SUICIDAL behavior , *SCHIZOAFFECTIVE disorders , *DISEASES - Abstract
Background: Visual hallucinations (VH) are a common, but understudied symptom of psychosis, experienced by individuals across diagnostic categories of psychotic and neuropsychiatric conditions. There are limited data on VH and associated clinical phenotypes in adult idiopathic psychotic disorders, which are needed to elucidate their relevance to psychotic illness paradigms.Method: In this cross-sectional study, we examined clinical risk factors for VH in a well-characterized sample of 766 patients with adult psychotic disorders across diagnostic categories of schizophrenia (n = 227), schizoaffective disorder (n = 210), and bipolar I disorder (n = 329). The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV-TR was used for diagnosis and symptom measurements.Results: The prevalence of VH was 26.1% (200/766). Multivariate logistic regression showed that VH were independently associated with the presence of hallucinations in other modalities, including auditory, tactile, olfactory, and gustatory hallucinations. History of a suicide attempt and catatonic behavior were also associated with VH. In addition, specific delusions were associated with VH, in particular, delusions of control, and religious, erotomanic and jealousy delusions. Diagnosis, negative symptoms, and family history of psychosis were not independent predictors of VH.Conclusions: Results showed the clinical and disease relevance of VH as they were associated with severe morbidity of illness, including suicide attempts and catatonic behavior. Findings also suggest a phenotype associated with hallucinations in other modalities and specific types of delusions. Based on our findings, VH may be a significant factor in assessing for suicidality and illness severity, warranting clinical attention and further study of underlying mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
155. Perceptual size discrimination requires awareness and late visual areas: A continuous flash suppression and interocular transfer study.
- Author
-
Peel, Hayden J., Sherman, Joshua A., Sperandio, Irene, Laycock, Robin, and Chouinard, Philippe A.
- Subjects
- *
DIFFERENTIATION (Cognition) , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *EYE , *SENSORY perception - Abstract
Highlights • CFS reveals that size perception requires awareness. • Interocular transfer reveals that size perception requires late visual areas. • RTs were faster when the prime and target were presented to the same eye under CFS. • The latter suggests that CFS entails competition between early monocular channels. Abstract We applied continuous flash suppression (CFS) during an interocular transfer paradigm to evaluate the importance of awareness and the contribution of early versus late visual structures in size recognition. Specifically, we tested if size judgements of a visible target could be influenced by a congruent or incongruent prime presented to the same or different eye. Without CFS, participants categorised a target as "small" or "large" more quickly when it was preceded by a congruent prime – regardless of whether the prime and target were presented to the same or different eye. Interocular transfer enabled us to infer that the observed priming was mediated by late visual areas. In contrast, there was no priming under CFS, which underscores the importance of awareness. We conclude that awareness and late visual structures are important for size perception and that any subconscious processing of the stimulus has minimal effect on size recognition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
156. Conscious awareness is required for the perceptual discrimination of threatening animal stimuli: A visual masking and continuous flash suppression study.
- Author
-
Cox, Emma J., Sperandio, Irene, Laycock, Robin, and Chouinard, Philippe A.
- Subjects
- *
CONSCIOUSNESS , *SEMANTICS , *STIMULUS & response (Biology) , *VISUAL masking , *PRIMING (Psychology) - Abstract
Highlights • Subconscious priming of threatening animal and neutral object stimuli was examined. • Primes were presented under visual masking or continuous flash suppression (CFS) • Priming at basic category level (e.g. snake vs spider) required conscious awareness. • Perceptual and semantic processing occurred during visible priming conditions. Abstract We investigated if the subliminal processing of threatening animal (snakes and spiders) and neutral object (cars and houses) stimuli can influence the discrimination of a subsequent visible stimulus. The prime and target pair were either identical, of the same category but with different physical features, or different in category and physical features. In two experiments, participants discriminated the basic level category (e.g. snake vs. spider) of a visible target stimulus that had been preceded by a visible or perceptually invisible prime stimulus. One experiment used visual masking to render prime stimuli perceptually invisible and the other used continuous flash suppression (CFS). Priming effects were demonstrated in both experiments when the prime was visible but not when the prime was rendered perceptually invisible. These findings demonstrate that conscious awareness could be required in the perceptual discrimination of threatening animal and neutral object images at their specific basic level category. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
157. Size Constancy is Preserved but Afterimages are Prolonged in Typical Individuals with Higher Degrees of Self-Reported Autistic Traits.
- Author
-
Sperandio, Irene, Unwin, Katy, Landry, Oriane, and Chouinard, Philippe
- Subjects
- *
AUTISM , *STATISTICAL correlation , *PROBABILITY theory , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *SELF-evaluation , *STATISTICS , *VISUAL perception , *WEIGHTS & measures , *PHENOTYPES , *DATA analysis , *DISEASE exacerbation , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Deficits in perceptual constancies from early infancy have been proposed to contribute to autism and exacerbate its symptoms (Hellendoorn et al., Frontiers in Psychology 6:1-16, 2015). Here, we examined size constancy in adults from the general population ( N = 106) with different levels of self-reported autistic traits using an approach based on negative afterimages. The afterimage strength, as indexed by duration and vividness, was also quantified. In opposition to the Hellendoorn and colleagues' model, we were unable to demonstrate any kind of relationship between abilities in size constancy and autistic traits. However, our results demonstrated that individuals with higher degrees of autistic traits experienced more persistent afterimages. We discuss possible retinal and post-retinal explanations for prolonged afterimages in people with higher levels of autistic traits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
158. Container size exerts a stronger influence than liquid volume on the perceived weight of objects.
- Author
-
Saccone, Elizabeth J., Goldsmith, Rachael M., Buckingham, Gavin, and Chouinard, Philippe A.
- Subjects
- *
SENSORIMOTOR integration , *INFLUENCE , *CONTAINERS , *SIZE , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *SENSORY perception , *EVALUATION research , *MEDICAL cooperation , *COMPARATIVE studies , *VISUAL perception , *PERCEPTUAL illusions , *PROMPTS (Psychology) - Abstract
Many features of an object can influence how we predict and perceive its weight. The current study evaluated the relative contributions of sensory and conceptual processing of object features on weight perception. We employed a novel paradigm to investigate how container size and the amount of liquid inside can influence the perceived weight of bottles and the forces deployed when lifting them. Stimulus pairs always had the same mass but could vary in liquid volume (full vs half-full bottle) or size (large vs small bottle; size-weight illusion (SWI)). In Experiment 1, participants lifted the stimuli via strings, which served to isolate the influence of visual from kinaesthetic information about the size of stimuli on perception and lifting behaviour. In Experiment 2, participants lifted the stimuli via handles that were attached directly to the objects. This lifting style is more likely to include deviations from true vertical lifting, which should theoretically provide more kinaesthetic information about the size of the stimuli. Experiment 1 did not produce any weight illusion. Experiment 2 produced a weight illusion but only when container size differed. Thus, liquid volume did not influence perceived weight when container size was held constant in either experiment. Curiously, additional control experiments revealed that participants could not discriminate between the different sized bottles solely from the kinaesthetic information received from a handle-based lift, suggesting that size might be processed differently when making explicit perceptual judgements about it than when influencing weight perception. Together, these findings suggest that weight illusions are driven more strongly by the kinaesthetic processing of stimulus features than predictions arising from conceptual weight cues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
159. Can deepfakes be used to study emotion perception? A comparison of dynamic face stimuli.
- Author
-
Becker C, Conduit R, Chouinard PA, and Laycock R
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Young Adult, Photic Stimulation, Social Perception, Emotions physiology, Facial Expression, Facial Recognition physiology, Video Recording
- Abstract
Video recordings accurately capture facial expression movements; however, they are difficult for face perception researchers to standardise and manipulate. For this reason, dynamic morphs of photographs are often used, despite their lack of naturalistic facial motion. This study aimed to investigate how humans perceive emotions from faces using real videos and two different approaches to artificially generating dynamic expressions - dynamic morphs, and AI-synthesised deepfakes. Our participants perceived dynamic morphed expressions as less intense when compared with videos (all emotions) and deepfakes (fearful, happy, sad). Videos and deepfakes were perceived similarly. Additionally, they perceived morphed happiness and sadness, but not morphed anger or fear, as less genuine than other formats. Our findings support previous research indicating that social responses to morphed emotions are not representative of those to video recordings. The findings also suggest that deepfakes may offer a more suitable standardized stimulus type compared to morphs. Additionally, qualitative data were collected from participants and analysed using ChatGPT, a large language model. ChatGPT successfully identified themes in the data consistent with those identified by an independent human researcher. According to this analysis, our participants perceived dynamic morphs as less natural compared with videos and deepfakes. That participants perceived deepfakes and videos similarly suggests that deepfakes effectively replicate natural facial movements, making them a promising alternative for face perception research. The study contributes to the growing body of research exploring the usefulness of generative artificial intelligence for advancing the study of human perception., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
160. EEG correlates of static and dynamic face perception: The role of naturalistic motion.
- Author
-
Becker C, Conduit R, Chouinard PA, and Laycock R
- Abstract
Much of our understanding of how the brain processes dynamic faces comes from research that compares static photographs to dynamic morphs, which exhibit simplified, computer-generated motion. By comparing static, video recorded, and dynamic morphed expressions, we aim to identify the neural correlates of naturalistic facial dynamism, using time-domain and time-frequency analysis. Dynamic morphs were made from the neutral and peak frames of video recorded transitions of happy and fearful expressions, which retained expression change and removed asynchronous and non-linear features of naturalistic facial motion. We found that dynamic morphs elicited increased N400 amplitudes and lower LPP amplitudes compared to other stimulus types. Video recordings elicited higher LPP amplitudes and greater frontal delta activity compared to other stimuli. Thematic analysis of participant interviews using a large language model revealed that participants found it difficult to assess the genuineness of morphed expressions, and easier to analyse the genuineness of happy compared to fearful expressions. Our findings suggest that animating real faces with artificial motion may violate expectations (N400) and reduce the social salience (LPP) of dynamic morphs. Results also suggest that delta oscillations in the frontal region may be involved with the perception of naturalistic facial motion in happy and fearful expressions. Overall, our findings highlight the sensitivity of neural mechanisms required for face perception to subtle changes in facial motion characteristics, which has important implications for neuroimaging research using faces with simplified motion., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
161. Comparison of Tiling Artifact Removal Methods in Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry Images.
- Author
-
Kandanaarachchi S, Gardner W, Alexander DLJ, Muir BW, Chouinard PA, Crewther SG, Scurr DJ, Halliday M, and Pigram PJ
- Abstract
Time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) imaging is used across many fields for the atomic and molecular characterization of surfaces, with both high sensitivity and high spatial resolution. When large analysis areas are required, standard ToF-SIMS instruments allow for the acquisition of adjoining tiles, which are acquired by rastering the primary ion beam. For such large area scans, tiling artifacts are a ubiquitous challenge, manifesting as intensity gradients across each tile and/or sudden changes in intensity between tiles. Such artifacts are thought to be related to a combination of sample charging, local detector sensitivity issues, and misalignment of the primary ion gun, among other instrumental factors. In this work, we investigated six different computational tiling artifact removal methods: tensor decomposition, multiplicative linear correction, linear discriminant analysis, seamless stitching, simple averaging, and simple interpolating. To ensure robustness in the study, we applied these methods to three hyperspectral ToF-SIMS data sets and one OrbiTrapSIMS data set. Our study includes a carefully designed statistical analysis and a quantitative survey that subjectively assessed the quality of the various methods employed. Our results demonstrate that while certain methods are useful and preferred more often, no one particular approach can be considered universally acceptable and that the effectiveness of the artifact removal method is strongly dependent on the particulars of the data set analyzed. As examples, the multiplicative linear correction and seamless stitching methods tended to score more highly on the subjective survey; however, for some data sets, this led to the introduction of new artifacts. In contrast, simple averaging and interpolation methods scored subjectively poorly on the biological data set, but more highly on the microarray data sets. We discuss and explore these findings in depth and present general recommendations given our findings to conclude the work.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
162. A review of the impairments, preserved visual functions, and neuropathology in 21 patients with visual form agnosia - A unique defect with line drawings.
- Author
-
Peel HJ and Chouinard PA
- Subjects
- Humans, Visual Perception, Vision, Ocular, Visual Fields, Vision Disorders etiology, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Agnosia
- Abstract
We present a comprehensive review of the rare syndrome visual form agnosia (VFA). We begin by documenting its history, including the origins of the term, and the first case study labelled as VFA. The defining characteristics of the syndrome, as others have previously defined it, are then described. The impairments, preserved aspects of visual perception, and areas of brain damage in 21 patients who meet these defining characteristics are described in detail, including which tests were used to verify the presence or absence of key symptoms. From this, we note important similarities along with notable areas of divergence between patients. Damage to the occipital lobe (20/21), an inability to recognise line drawings (19/21), preserved colour vision (14/21), and visual field defects (16/21) were areas of consistency across most cases. We found it useful to distinguish between shape and form as distinct constructs when examining perceptual abilities in VFA patients. Our observations suggest that these patients often exhibit difficulties in processing simplified versions of form. Deficits in processing orientation and size were uncommon. Motion perception and visual imagery were not widely tested for despite being typically cited as defining features of the syndrome - although in the sample described, motion perception was never found to be a deficit. Moreover, problems with vision (e.g., poor visual acuity and the presence of hemianopias/scotomas in the visual fields) are more common than we would have thought and may also contribute to perceptual impairments in patients with VFA. We conclude that VFA is a perceptual disorder where the visual system has a reduced ability to synthesise lines together for the purposes of making sense of what images represent holistically., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
163. Visual illusions in young people reporting psychotic-like experiences.
- Author
-
Sperandio I, Chouinard PA, Paice E, Griffiths-King DJ, and Hodgekins J
- Subjects
- Humans, Adolescent, Anxiety, Emotions, Anxiety Disorders, Illusions physiology, Psychotic Disorders psychology
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: A disruption in the co-ordination of bottom-up and top-down processing is thought to underlie anomalous perceptual experiences in psychosis. Visual illusions represent a valuable methodology in exploring this disruption. Here, we examined visual illusions in a group of young people having psychotic-like experiences. We also examined the relationship between illusion susceptibility and appraisal of psychotic-like experiences as well as depression, anxiety and stress levels., Method: 25 young people reporting psychotic-like experiences and 53 healthy participants performed an adjustment task that measured susceptibility to a battery of 13 visual illusions. Levels of depression, anxiety and stress were quantified in both groups. The clinical group also completed measures examining frequency, appraisals and emotional responses to psychotic-like experiences., Results: A general increase of illusion susceptibility was found in the clinical group compared to the control group. However, when depression, anxiety and stress levels were controlled for, this difference disappeared. Stress turned out to be the best predictor of illusion susceptibility in the clinical group, whereas anomalous experiences, depression and anxiety were unrelated to overall illusion strength., Limitations: This study is limited to young participants reporting significant mental health difficulties and psychotic-like experiences. Findings should be replicated in an Ultra High Risk (prodromal) group., Conclusions: Increased levels of stress explained the enhanced vulnerability to illusions in the clinical group. This increased susceptibility suggests a perceptual style that relies too heavily on prior expectations at the expense of the true sensory evidence, potentially leading to an altered perceptual experience of the world., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest We report no potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
164. The Effects of Word Identity, Case, and SOA on Word Priming in a Subliminal Context.
- Author
-
Peel HJ, Royals KA, and Chouinard PA
- Subjects
- Humans, Reaction Time, Semantics
- Abstract
It is widely assumed that subliminal word priming is case insensitive and that a short SOA (< 100 ms) is required to observe any effects. Here we attempted to replicate results from an influential study with the inclusion of a longer SOA to re-examine these assumptions. Participants performed a semantic categorisation task on visible word targets that were preceded either 64 or 192 ms by a subliminal prime. The prime and target were either the same or different word and could appear in the same or different case. We confirmed the presence of subliminal word priming (same word < different word reaction times). The word priming effect did not differ when case was the same or different, which supports case insensitive word priming. However, there was a general facilitation effect driven by case (same case < different case). Finally, there was a significant difference between the two SOA conditions; however, there were no interactions between SOA and any other factor, demonstrating that subliminal priming did not differ between short and long SOAs. The results demonstrate that word priming is case insensitive but that there is nevertheless an overall facilitation when words, regardless if they are repeated or not, are presented in the same case. This facilitation in case may reflect modularity in the low-level processing of the visual characteristics of words., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
165. Having a live huntsman spider on a rubber hand does not modulate the rubber-hand illusion in a top-down manner.
- Author
-
Chouinard PA and Stewart R
- Subjects
- Animals, Body Image, Hand, Humans, Proprioception, Illusions, Spiders, Touch Perception
- Abstract
The rubber-hand illusion is an illusion where a person embodies a rubber hand as if it were their own. After embodiment, many studies have threatened the false hand and measured physiological responses to the threat for the purposes of verification. For the first time, we tested if embodiment of the false hand could be modulated with a fearful stimulus already present prior to the elicitation of the illusion. This was done by having a live huntsman spider placed on top of the false hand for the entire duration of testing. We also examined if the procedure could change implicit attitudes towards spiders. The results revealed that the embodiment of the false hand with the fearful stimulus on top of it occurred as strongly as when the latter was not there, suggesting that the top-down processing of fearful stimuli is not strong enough to influence bottom-up processes. However, implicit attitudes towards spiders did not change.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
166. The strength of the Shepard illusion in children coincides with age and cognitive skills but not perceptual abilities.
- Author
-
Chouinard PA, Royals KA, and Landry O
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Cognition, Humans, Language, Problem Solving, Illusions
- Abstract
We examined how the strength of the Shepard illusion develops with age in typically developing children. To this end, we recruited children between the ages of 6 and 14 years and quantified the degree to which they experienced the illusion. The strength of the illusion increased with age - reaching adult levels by 11.5 years. We also measured abilities in size and shape discrimination, receptive language, and abstract reasoning to determine if changes in illusion strength were also associated with these factors. Abilities in size and shape matching increased with age but did not correlate with the strength of the Shepard illusion. Receptive language and abstract reasoning increased with age and correlated with the strength of the Shepard illusion. However, a multiple regression analysis revealed that they did not contribute beyond their shared variance with age. Based on these findings, we propose that the illusion has a strong acquired component to it and requires the maturation of high-level processes before it is experienced to adult levels at preadolescence.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
167. Effects of multitasking and intention-behaviour consistency when facing yellow traffic light uncertainty.
- Author
-
Wright D and Chouinard PA
- Subjects
- Accidents, Traffic prevention & control, Adolescent, Adult, Color, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Accidents, Traffic psychology, Automobile Driving psychology, Intention, Photic Stimulation methods, Reaction Time physiology, Uncertainty
- Abstract
We examined the effects of multitasking on resolving response bistability to yellow traffic lights, using the performance metrics of reaction time and stopping frequency. We also examined whether people's actual behaviours, measured by implicit foot pedal responses, differed from their intentions related to these factors, as measured by explicit verbal commands. In a dual-task paradigm, participants responded to random traffic light changes, presented over a static background photograph of an intersection, using either foot pedals or verbal commands, while simultaneously identifying spoken words as either "animals" or "artefacts" via button pressing. The dual-task condition was found to prolong reaction times relative to a single-task condition. In addition, verbal commands were faster than the foot pedal responses, and conservativeness was the same for both types of responses. A second experiment, which provided a more dynamic simulation of the first experiment, confirmed that conservativeness did not differ between verbal commands and foot pedal responses. We conclude that multitasking affects a person's ability to resolve response bistability to yellow traffic lights. If one considers that prolonged reaction times reduce the amount of distance available to safely stop at intersections, this study underscores how multitasking poses a considerable safety risk for drivers approaching a yellow traffic light.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
168. Illusory contour perception in domestic dogs.
- Author
-
Byosiere SE, Chouinard PA, Howell TJ, and Bennett PC
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Domestic, Dogs physiology, Form Perception physiology, Illusions physiology, Optical Illusions physiology, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology
- Abstract
One way to better understand how animals visually perceive their environment is to assess the way in which visual information is interpreted and adapted based on preconceptions. Domestic dogs represent a unique species in which to evaluate visual perception as recent findings suggest they may differ from humans and other animal species in terms of their susceptibility to geometric visual illusions. Dogs have demonstrated human-like, reversed, and null susceptibility depending on the type of illusion. To further evaluate how dogs perceive their environment, it is necessary to perform additional assessments of visual perception. One such assessment is the perceptual filling-in of figures, which may be invoked when presented with illusory contours. Six dogs were assessed on their perception of the Ehrenstein illusory contour illusion in a two-choice size-discrimination task. Dogs, as a group, demonstrated equivocal perception of illusory contours. Some individual dogs, however, demonstrated human-like perception of the subjective contours, providing preliminary evidence that this species is capable of perceiving illusory contour illusions, thereby improving the current understanding of canine visual perception capabilities. Additional assessments using alternative illusory contour illusions are needed to clarify these results and identify features that underpin the individual differences observed.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
169. The development of the size-weight illusion in children coincides with the development of nonverbal cognition rather than motor skills.
- Author
-
Chouinard PA, Matheson KG, Royals KA, Landry O, Buckingham G, Saccone EJ, and Hocking DR
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Comprehension physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Problem Solving physiology, Child Development physiology, Cognition physiology, Illusions physiology, Motor Skills physiology
- Abstract
We examined how the strength of the size-weight illusion develops with age in typically developing children. To this end, we recruited children aged 5-12 years and quantified the degree to which they experienced the illusion. We hypothesized that the strength of the illusion would increase with age. The results supported this hypothesis. We also measured abilities in manual dexterity, receptive language, and abstract reasoning to determine whether changes in illusion strength were associated with these factors. Manual dexterity and receptive language did not correlate with illusion strength. Conversely, illusion strength and abstract reasoning were tightly coupled with each other. Multiple regression further revealed that age, manual dexterity, and receptive language did not contribute more to the variance in illusion strength beyond children's abilities in abstract reasoning. Taken together, the effects of age on the size-weight illusion appear to be explained by the development of nonverbal cognition. These findings not only inform the literature on child development but also have implications for theoretical explanations on the size-weight illusion. We suggest that the illusion has a strong acquired component to it and that it is strengthened by children's reasoning skills and perhaps an understanding of the world that develops with age., (Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
170. The influence of size in weight illusions is unique relative to other object features.
- Author
-
Saccone EJ and Chouinard PA
- Subjects
- Humans, Illusions physiology, Models, Theoretical, Size Perception physiology, Weight Perception physiology
- Abstract
Research into weight illusions has provided valuable insight into the functioning of the human perceptual system. Associations between the weight of an object and its other features, such as its size, material, density, conceptual information, or identity, influence our expectations and perceptions of weight. Earlier accounts of weight illusions underscored the importance of previous interactions with objects in the formation of these associations. In this review, we propose a theory that the influence of size on weight perception could be driven by innate and phylogenetically older mechanisms, and that it is therefore more deep-seated than the effects of other features that influence our perception of an object's weight. To do so, we first consider the different associations that exist between the weight of an object and its other features and discuss how different object features influence weight perception in different weight illusions. After this, we consider the cognitive, neurological, and developmental evidence, highlighting the uniqueness of size-weight associations and how they might be reinforced rather than driven by experience alone. In the process, we propose a novel neuroanatomical account of how size might influence weight perception differently than other object features do.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
171. Sensitivity to biomechanical limitations during postural decision-making depends on the integrity of posterior superior parietal cortex.
- Author
-
Wood DK, Chouinard PA, Major AJ, and Goodale MA
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomechanical Phenomena physiology, Brain Mapping, Female, Hand Strength physiology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Parietal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Young Adult, Decision Making physiology, Movement physiology, Parietal Lobe physiology, Posture physiology
- Abstract
Most object-directed limb movements can be carried out with a comfortable grasp posture. However, the orientation of an object relative to our bodies can sometimes lead us to select an uncomfortable or awkward grasp posture due to limitations imposed by the biomechanics of the arm. In a series of experiments, we identified a network of cortical areas that are engaged during the selection of movement strategies. Neurologically intact participants and two brain-damaged patients with overlapping lesions in the right posterior superior parietal lobule (pSPL) performed a grasp posture selection task in which biomechanical constraints were the primary consideration for selecting an action. The task induced states of bistable actions whereby the same stimulus gave rise to categorically different grasp postures. In a behavioral experiment, the two patients displayed a large range of manual bistability with the contralesional hand, resulting in a higher incidence of awkward grasping postures. In neurologically intact participants, a separate functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment revealed activation of a parieto-frontal network, which included the posterior intraparietal sulcus (pIPS) along the banks of the pSPL that was parametrically modulated by the degree of bistability in grasp posture selection. Superimposing this activation over the patients' structural MRIs revealed that the pIPS/pSPL activation in the neurologically intact participants overlapped with lesioned cortical tissue in both patients; all other areas of activation overlapped with intact cortical tissue in the patients. These results provide converging evidence that the posterior parietal cortex plays a critical role in selecting biomechanically appropriate postures during reach-to-grasp behaviors., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.