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1.
Front Psychol ; 14: 1165143, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38098532

ABSTRACT

Introduction: This research uses the production method to study aesthetic preference for sequences of human body postures. In two experiments, participants produced image sequences based on their aesthetic preferences, while we measured the visual aesthetic features displayed in the compositions. Methods: In Experiment 1, participants created static image sequences based on their preferences. In Experiment 2, participants sorted images into apparent motion sequences they preferred to view. Results: In Experiment 1, good continuation of successive bodies and body-like objects was the preferred order. In Experiment 2, participants preferred abstract images with local sequential symmetry and human body postures exhibiting global sequential symmetry. Discussion: Our findings are compared to those of previous studies that employed the more widely used method of choice. Our experiments propose novel methods and conceptualizations for investigating aesthetic preferences for human body movement and other types of stimulus sequences.

2.
Cortex ; 151: 211-223, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35439718

ABSTRACT

The recognition of negative emotions from facial expressions is shown to decline across the adult lifespan, with some evidence that this decline begins around middle age. While some studies have suggested ageing may be associated with changes in neural response to emotional expressions, it is not known whether ageing is associated with changes in the network connectivity associated with processing emotional expressions. In this study, we examined the effect of participant age on whole-brain connectivity to various brain regions that show connectivity during emotion processing, namely, the left and right amygdalae, medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), and right posterior superior temporal sulcus (rpSTS). The study involved healthy participants aged 20-65 years who completed an implicit affect processing task involving facial expressions displaying anger, fear, happiness, and neutral expressions during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Participants were also tested on recognition accuracy during an emotion labelling task. We found that participant age was negatively associated with connectivity between the left amygdala and voxels in the left occipital pole; between the rpSTS and voxels in the orbitofrontal cortex; and between the mPFC and cingulate cortex and left insular cortex. Furthermore, these effects were due to a greater age-related decline in brain connectivity for negative expressions compared to happy and neutral expressions. There was, however, no significant relationship between age and emotion recognition accuracy (though in the expected direction), and between connectivity strength and emotion recognition accuracy. Together, these results provide evidence for a specific age-related decline in the neural processing of negative emotions, and could suggest that changes in underlying network connectivity over the working adult lifespan might occur before any marked decline in the recognition of the emotion.


Subject(s)
Facial Expression , Longevity , Adult , Amygdala/physiology , Brain Mapping , Emotions/physiology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Middle Aged , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology
3.
Cortex ; 144: 109-132, 2021 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34666297

ABSTRACT

Face shape and surface textures are two important cues that aid in the perception of facial expressions of emotion. Additionally, this perception is also influenced by high-level emotion concepts. Across two studies, we use representational similarity analysis to investigate the relative roles of shape, surface, and conceptual information in the perception, categorisation, and neural representation of facial expressions. In Study 1, 50 participants completed a perceptual task designed to measure the perceptual similarity of expression pairs, and a categorical task designed to measure the confusability between expression pairs when assigning emotion labels to a face. We used representational similarity analysis and constructed three models of the similarities between emotions using distinct information. Two models were based on stimulus-based cues (face shapes and surface textures) and one model was based on emotion concepts. Using multiple linear regression, we found that behaviour during both tasks was related with the similarity of emotion concepts. The model based on face shapes was more related with behaviour in the perceptual task than in the categorical, and the model based on surface textures was more related with behaviour in the categorical than the perceptual task. In Study 2, 30 participants viewed facial expressions while undergoing fMRI, allowing for the measurement of brain representational geometries of facial expressions of emotion in three core face-responsive regions (the Fusiform Face Area, Occipital Face Area, and Superior Temporal Sulcus), and a region involved in theory of mind (Medial Prefrontal Cortex). Across all four regions, the representational distances between facial expression pairs were related to the similarities of emotion concepts, but not to either of the stimulus-based cues. Together, these results highlight the important top-down influence of high-level emotion concepts both in behavioural tasks and in the neural representation of facial expressions.


Subject(s)
Cues , Facial Expression , Brain , Brain Mapping , Emotions , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging
4.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 19874, 2019 12 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31882730

ABSTRACT

Objectum-sexuality (OS) is a sexual orientation which has received little attention in the academic literature. Individuals who identify as OS experience emotional, romantic and/or sexual feelings towards inanimate objects (e.g. a bridge, a statue). We tested 34 OS individuals and 88 controls, and provide the first empirical evidence that OS is linked to two separate neurodevelopmental traits - autism and synaesthesia. We show that OS individuals possess significantly higher rates of diagnosed autism and significantly stronger autistic traits compared to controls, as well as a significantly higher prevalence of synaesthesia, and significant synaesthetic traits inherent in the nature of their attractions. Our results suggest that OS may encapsulate autism and synaesthesia within its phenomenology. Our data speak to debates concerning the biological underpinnings of sexuality, to models of autism and synaesthesia, and to psychological and philosophical models of romantic love.


Subject(s)
Autistic Disorder/complications , Sexuality/physiology , Synesthesia/complications , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Sexual Behavior , Surveys and Questionnaires , Young Adult
5.
Front Hum Neurosci ; 9: 390, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26236212

ABSTRACT

We report the case of an individual with acquired prosopagnosia who experiences extreme difficulties in recognizing familiar faces in everyday life despite excellent object recognition skills. Formal testing indicates that he is also severely impaired at remembering pre-experimentally unfamiliar faces and that he takes an extremely long time to identify famous faces and to match unfamiliar faces. Nevertheless, he performs as accurately and quickly as controls at identifying inverted familiar and unfamiliar faces and can recognize famous faces from their external features. He also performs as accurately as controls at recognizing famous faces when fracturing conceals the configural information in the face. He shows evidence of impaired global processing but normal local processing of Navon figures. This case appears to reflect the clearest example yet of an acquired prosopagnosic patient whose familiar face recognition deficit is caused by a severe configural processing deficit in the absence of any problems in featural processing. These preserved featural skills together with apparently intact visual imagery for faces allow him to identify a surprisingly large number of famous faces when unlimited time is available. The theoretical implications of this pattern of performance for understanding the nature of acquired prosopagnosia are discussed.

6.
J Neuropsychol ; 5(2): 255-82, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21923789

ABSTRACT

Much of synaesthesia research focused on colour, but not all cross-domain correspondences reported by synaesthetes are strictly sensory. For example, some synaesthetes personify letters and numbers, in additional to visualizing them in colour. First reported in the 1890s, the phenomenon has been largely ignored by scientists for more than a century with the exception of a few single-case reports. In the present study, we collected detailed self-reports on grapheme personification using a questionnaire, providing us with a comprehensive description of the phenomenology of grapheme personification. Next, we documented the behavioural consequences of personifying graphemes using a congruity paradigm involving a gender judgement task; we also examined whether personification is associated with heightened empathy as measured using Empathy Quotient and found substantial individual differences within our sample. Lastly, we present the first neuroimaging case study of personification, indicating that the precuneus activation previously seen in other synaesthesia studies may be implicated in the process. We propose that frameworks for understanding synaesthesia could be extended into other domains of cognition and that grapheme personification shares more in common with normal cognition than may be readily apparent. This benign form of hyper-mentalizing may provide a unique point of view on one of the most central problems in human cognition - understanding others' state of mind.


Subject(s)
Association , Color Perception/physiology , Comprehension/physiology , Individuality , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Adult , Age of Onset , Female , Humans , Imagination , Male , Middle Aged , Photic Stimulation , Reaction Time/physiology , Vocabulary
7.
Cortex ; 45(10): 1261-5, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19631317

ABSTRACT

Number forms, conscious visuo-spatial representations of the sequence of numbers, are found in around 12% of the population. However, their contribution to numerical cognition is not well understood. In this study we contrast the speeded performance of individuals with number forms versus controls on single digit multiplication, subtraction and addition. Previous research has suggested that multiplication may rely more on retrieval of verbal facts whereas subtraction relies more on online calculation using a putatively spatial 'mental number line'. If people with number forms rely more heavily on visual-spatial strategies than verbal ones then we hypothesised that multiplication may be disproportionately affected by this strategy relative to subtraction, and this was found.


Subject(s)
Mathematical Concepts , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Problem Solving/physiology , Space Perception/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Analysis of Variance , Color Perception/physiology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Photic Stimulation , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Reaction Time/physiology , Taste Perception/physiology
8.
Neurocase ; 13(2): 86-93, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17566940

ABSTRACT

Synaesthesia is often triggered by numbers, although it is conceivable that different aspects of numerical representation are responsible for different variants of synaesthesia. For individuals with "higher synaesthesia" it is assumed that number meaning (or numerosity) is responsible for the elicitation of synaesthetic experiences. This study documents a case study of a synaesthete, TD, who broadly fits this profile. TD reports that the same colours are elicited from physically different representations of number (digits, dice patterns and finger counting) provided that they share the same numerosity. The authenticity of his synaesthesia is established using Stroop-like priming and interference paradigms. Not only does synaesthetic colour interfere with veridical colour judgements, but also veridical colours can interfere with numerosity judgments. This suggests a close bi-directional coupling between numerosity and colour. Together, these findings constrain theories concerning the neural basis of synaesthesia.


Subject(s)
Association , Color Perception/physiology , Fingers , Form Perception/physiology , Adult , Humans , Male , Psychophysics
9.
Conscious Cogn ; 16(4): 913-31, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17126034

ABSTRACT

Recent research has suggested that not all grapheme-colour synaesthetes are alike. One suggestion is that they can be divided, phenomenologically, in terms of whether the colours are experienced in external or internal space (projector-associator distinction). Another suggestion is that they can be divided according to whether it is the perceptual or conceptual attributes of a stimulus that is critical (higher-lower distinction). This study compares the behavioural performance of 7 projector and 7 associator synaesthetes. We demonstrate that this distinction does not map on to behavioural traits expected from the higher-lower distinction. We replicate previous research showing that projectors are faster at naming their synaesthetic colours than veridical colours, and that associators show the reverse profile. Synaesthetes who project colours into external space but not on to the surface of the grapheme behave like associators on this task. In a second task, graphemes presented briefly in the periphery are more likely to elicit reports of colour in projectors than associators, but the colours only tend to be accurate when the grapheme itself is also accurately identified. We propose an alternative model of individual differences in grapheme-colour synaesthesia that emphasises the role of different spatial reference frames in synaesthetic perception. In doing so, we attempt to bring the synaesthesia literature closer to current models of non-synaesthetic perception, attention and binding.


Subject(s)
Association , Awareness , Color Perception , Imagination , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Adolescent , Adult , Attention , Female , Humans , Individuality , Male , Middle Aged , Orientation , Projection
10.
Perception ; 35(8): 1024-33, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17076063

ABSTRACT

Sensory and cognitive mechanisms allow stimuli to be perceived with properties relating to sight, sound, touch, etc, and ensure, for example, that visual properties are perceived as visual experiences, rather than sounds, tastes, smells, etc. Theories of normal development can be informed by cases where this modularity breaks down, in a condition known as synaesthesia. Conventional wisdom has held that this occurs extremely rarely (0.05% of births) and affects women more than men. Here we present the first test of synaesthesia prevalence with sampling that does not rely on self-referral, and which uses objective tests to establish genuineness. We show that (a) the prevalence of synaesthesia is 88 times higher than previously assumed, (b) the most common variant is coloured days, (c) the most studied variant (grapheme-colour synaesthesia)--previously believed most common--is prevalent at 1%, and (d) there is no strong asymmetry in the distribution of synaesthesia across the sexes. Hence, we suggest that female biases reported earlier likely arose from (or were exaggerated by) sex differences in self-disclosure.


Subject(s)
Perceptual Disorders/psychology , Adult , Chi-Square Distribution , Child , Color Perception , Cues , Female , Humans , Male , Music , Perceptual Disorders/diagnosis , Prevalence , Reading , Self Disclosure , Sex Factors , Surveys and Questionnaires
11.
Prog Brain Res ; 155: 259-71, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17027393

ABSTRACT

Synesthesia is a condition in which stimulation in one modality also gives rise to a perceptual experience in a second modality. In two recent studies we found that the condition is more common than previously reported; up to 5% of the population may experience at least one type of synesthesia. Although the condition has been traditionally viewed as an anomaly (e.g., breakdown in modularity), it seems that at least some of the mechanisms underlying synesthesia do reflect universal crossmodal mechanisms. We review here a number of examples of crossmodal correspondences found in both synesthetes and nonsynesthetes including pitch-lightness and vision-touch interaction, as well as cross-domain spatial-numeric interactions. Additionally, we discuss the common role of spatial attention in binding shape and color surface features (whether ordinary or synesthetic color). Consistently with behavioral and neuroimaging data showing that chromatic-graphemic (colored-letter) synesthesia is a genuine perceptual phenomenon implicating extrastriate cortex, we also present electrophysiological data showing modulation of visual evoked potentials by synesthetic color congruency.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Perception/physiology , Perceptual Disorders/physiopathology , Animals , Brain/pathology , Humans , Knowledge of Results, Psychological , Perception/classification , Perceptual Disorders/epidemiology , Psychophysics , Time Factors
12.
Cortex ; 42(2): 232-42, 2006 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16683497

ABSTRACT

The neural mechanisms involved in binding features such as shape and color are a matter of some debate. Does accurate binding rely on spatial attention functions of the parietal lobe or can it occur without attentional input? One extraordinary phenomenon that may shed light on this question is that of chromatic-graphemic synesthesia, a rare condition in which letter shapes evoke color perceptions. A popular suggestion is that synesthesia results from cross-activation between different functional regions (e.g., between shape and color areas of the ventral pathway). Under such conditions binding may not require parietal involvement and could occur preattentively. We tested this hypothesis in two synesthetes who perceived grayscale letters and digits in color. We found no evidence for preattentive binding using a visual search paradigm in which the target was a synesthetic inducer. In another experiment involving color judgments, we show that the congruency of target color and the synesthetic color of irrelevant digits modulates performance more when the digits are included within the attended region of space. We propose that the mechanisms giving rise to this type of synesthesia appear to follow at least some principles of normal binding, and even synesthetic binding seems to require attention.


Subject(s)
Association , Attention , Color Perception , Discrimination Learning , Orientation , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Reading , Semantics , Adult , Efficiency , Female , Humans , Individuality , Knowledge of Results, Psychological , Psychophysics , Reaction Time
13.
Brain Cogn ; 61(2): 139-58, 2006 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16466839

ABSTRACT

Developmental prosopagnosia (DP) is a severe impairment in identifying faces that is present from early in life and that occurs despite no apparent brain damage and intact visual and intellectual function. Here, we investigated what aspects of face processing are impaired/spared in developmental prosopagnosia by examining a relatively large group of individuals with DP (n = 8) using an extensive battery of well-established tasks. The tasks included measures of sensitivity to global motion and to global form, detection that a stimulus is a face, determination of its sex, holistic face processing, processing of face identity based on features, contour, and the spacing of features, and judgments of attractiveness. The DP cases showed normal sensitivity to global motion and global form and performed normally on our tests of face detection and holistic processing. On the other tasks, many DP cases were impaired but there was no systematic pattern. At least half showed deficits in processing of facial identity based on either the outer contour or spacing of the internal features, and/or on judgments of attractiveness. Three of the eight were impaired in processing facial identify based on the shape of internal features. The results show that DP is a heterogeneous condition and that impairment in recognizing faces cannot be predicted by poor performance on any one measure of face processing.


Subject(s)
Face , Prosopagnosia/diagnosis , Prosopagnosia/physiopathology , Adult , Aged , Female , Form Perception/physiology , Humans , Judgment , Middle Aged , Motion Perception/physiology , Recognition, Psychology , Severity of Illness Index , Sex Factors , Signal Detection, Psychological/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology
14.
Cognition ; 101(1): 114-28, 2006 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16288733

ABSTRACT

This study compares the tendency for numerals to elicit spontaneous perceptions of colour or taste (synaesthesia) with the tendency to visualise numbers as occupying particular visuo-spatial configurations (number forms). The prevalence of number forms was found to be significantly higher in synaesthetes experiencing colour compared both to synaesthetes experiencing taste and to control participants lacking any synaesthetic experience. This suggests that the presence of synaesthetic colour sensations enhances the tendency to explicitly represent numbers in a visuo-spatial format although the two symptoms may nevertheless be logically independent (i.e. it is possible to have number forms without colour, and coloured numbers without forms). Number forms are equally common in men and women, unlike previous reports of synaesthesia that have suggested a strong female bias. Individuals who possess a number form are also likely to possess visuo-spatial forms for other ordinal sequences (e.g. days, months, letters) which suggests that it is the ordinal nature of numbers rather than numerical quantity that gives rise to this particular mode of representation. Finally, we also describe some consequences of number forms for performance in a number comparison task.


Subject(s)
Mathematics , Space Perception , Visual Perception , Adult , Color Perception , Female , Humans , Male , Taste
15.
J Cogn Neurosci ; 17(11): 1766-73, 2005 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16269112

ABSTRACT

In synesthesia, certain stimuli ("inducers") may give rise to perceptual experience in additional modalities not normally associated with them ("concurrent"). For example, color-grapheme synesthetes automatically perceive achromatic numbers as colored (e.g., 7 is turquoise). Although synesthetes know when a given color matches the one evoked by a certain number, colors do not automatically give rise to any sort of number experience. The behavioral consequences of synesthesia have been documented using Stroop-like paradigms, usually using color judgments. Owing to the unidirectional nature of the synesthetic experience, little has been done to obtain performance measures that could indicate whether bidirectional cross-activation occurs in synesthesia. Here it is shown that colors do implicitly evoke numerical magnitudes in color-grapheme synesthetes, but not in nonsynesthetic participants. It is proposed that bidirectional coactivation of brain areas is responsible for the links between color and magnitude processing in color-grapheme synesthesia and that unidirectional models of synesthesia might have to be revised.


Subject(s)
Cognition/physiology , Color Perception/physiology , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Adult , Female , Form Perception/physiology , Humans , Learning/physiology , Photic Stimulation/methods , Reaction Time/physiology
16.
Psychol Sci ; 13(2): 190-3, 2002 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11934007

ABSTRACT

Accumulated evidence from electrophysiology and neuroimaging suggests that face perception involves extrastriate visual mechanisms specialized in processing physiognomic features and building a perceptual representation that is categorically distinct and can be identified by face-recognition units. In the present experiment, we recorded event-related brain potentials in order to explore possible contextual influences on the activity of this perceptual mechanism. Subjects werefirst exposed to pairs of small shapes, which did not elicit any face-specific brain activity. The same stimuli, however, elicitedface-specific brain activity after subjects saw them embedded in schematic faces, which probably primed the subjects to interpret the shapes as schematic eyes. No face-specific activity was observed when objects rather than faces were used to form the context. We conclude that the activity of face-specific extrastriate perceptual mechanisms can be modulated by contextual constraints that determine the significance of the visual input.


Subject(s)
Arousal/physiology , Attention/physiology , Evoked Potentials, Visual/physiology , Face , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Adult , Brain Mapping , Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Discrimination Learning/physiology , Electroencephalography , Female , Humans , Male , Visual Pathways/physiology
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