Processing fluency for visual synchrony perception

<p>Prior research has found that interpersonal synchrony increases social closeness and cooperation: this is often referred to as the synchrony-bonding effect. Most explanations for this synchrony-bonding effect rely upon higher-order social cognition (e.g. shared goals or selfother merging)....

全面介紹

書目詳細資料
Main Authors: Bamford, JS, Tarr, B, Cohen, E
格式: Internet publication
語言:English
出版: PsyArXiv 2022
_version_ 1826312267870765056
author Bamford, JS
Tarr, B
Cohen, E
author_facet Bamford, JS
Tarr, B
Cohen, E
author_sort Bamford, JS
collection OXFORD
description <p>Prior research has found that interpersonal synchrony increases social closeness and cooperation: this is often referred to as the synchrony-bonding effect. Most explanations for this synchrony-bonding effect rely upon higher-order social cognition (e.g. shared goals or selfother merging). Relatively little attention has been given to the perceptual experience of synchrony, and the low-level perceptual mechanisms involved, such as processing fluency. In two pre-registered experiments, we tested the novel hypothesis that synchrony (congruent movement) is easier to process than non-synchrony. In Study 1, no effect of direction congruency on performance was detected. However, Study 2 found a significant effect of speed congruency. This indicates decreased processing load when stimuli are moving at the same speed. We then discuss how these reduced visual stimuli may relate to naturalistic periodic movement. Crucially, the effect observed here does not rely upon social stimuli and may operate at an early stage of perceptual processing. This is an initial step in establishing a novel theory of the synchrony-bonding effect, based upon the principles of processing fluency.</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-07T08:26:31Z
format Internet publication
id oxford-uuid:a216ce1a-d0a1-4432-9a53-4b51e38d29f8
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T08:26:31Z
publishDate 2022
publisher PsyArXiv
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:a216ce1a-d0a1-4432-9a53-4b51e38d29f82024-02-16T07:03:14ZProcessing fluency for visual synchrony perceptionInternet publicationhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_7ad9uuid:a216ce1a-d0a1-4432-9a53-4b51e38d29f8EnglishSymplectic ElementsPsyArXiv2022Bamford, JSTarr, BCohen, E<p>Prior research has found that interpersonal synchrony increases social closeness and cooperation: this is often referred to as the synchrony-bonding effect. Most explanations for this synchrony-bonding effect rely upon higher-order social cognition (e.g. shared goals or selfother merging). Relatively little attention has been given to the perceptual experience of synchrony, and the low-level perceptual mechanisms involved, such as processing fluency. In two pre-registered experiments, we tested the novel hypothesis that synchrony (congruent movement) is easier to process than non-synchrony. In Study 1, no effect of direction congruency on performance was detected. However, Study 2 found a significant effect of speed congruency. This indicates decreased processing load when stimuli are moving at the same speed. We then discuss how these reduced visual stimuli may relate to naturalistic periodic movement. Crucially, the effect observed here does not rely upon social stimuli and may operate at an early stage of perceptual processing. This is an initial step in establishing a novel theory of the synchrony-bonding effect, based upon the principles of processing fluency.</p>
spellingShingle Bamford, JS
Tarr, B
Cohen, E
Processing fluency for visual synchrony perception
title Processing fluency for visual synchrony perception
title_full Processing fluency for visual synchrony perception
title_fullStr Processing fluency for visual synchrony perception
title_full_unstemmed Processing fluency for visual synchrony perception
title_short Processing fluency for visual synchrony perception
title_sort processing fluency for visual synchrony perception
work_keys_str_mv AT bamfordjs processingfluencyforvisualsynchronyperception
AT tarrb processingfluencyforvisualsynchronyperception
AT cohene processingfluencyforvisualsynchronyperception