Abstract
The ability to find and evade fighting persons in a crowd is potentially life-saving. To investigate how the visual system processes threatening actions, we employed a visual search paradigm with threatening boxer targets among emotionally-neutral walker distractors, and vice versa. We found that a boxer popped out for both intact and scrambled actions, whereas walkers did not. A reverse correlation analysis revealed that observers' responses clustered around the time of the "punch", a signature movement of boxing actions, but not around specific movements of the walker. These findings support the existence of a detector for signature movements in action perception. This detector helps in rapidly detecting aggressive behavior in a crowd, potentially through an expedited (sub)cortical threat-detection mechanism. © 2012 van Boxtel, Lu.
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CITATION STYLE
van Boxtel, J. J. A., & Lu, H. (2012). Signature movements lead to efficient search for threatening actions. PLoS ONE, 7(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0037085
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