Are Effects of Action on Perception Real? Evidence from Transformed Movements

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Abstract

It has been argued that several reported non-visual influences on perception cannot be truly perceptual. If they were, they should affect the perception of target objects and reference objects used to express perceptual judgments, and thus cancel each other out. This reasoning presumes that non-visual manipulations impact target objects and comparison objects equally. In the present study we show that equalizing a body-related manipulation between target objects and reference objects essentially abolishes the impact of that manipulation so as it should do when that manipulation actually altered perception. Moreover, the manipulation has an impact on judgements when applied to only the target object but not to the reference object, and that impact reverses when only applied to the reference object but not to the target object. A perceptual explanation predicts this reversal, whereas explanations in terms of post-perceptual response biases or demand effects do not. Altogether these results suggest that body-related influences on perception cannot as a whole be attributed to extraperceptual factors.

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Kirsch, W., Ullrich, B., & Kunde, W. (2016). Are Effects of Action on Perception Real? Evidence from Transformed Movements. PLoS ONE, 11(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0167993

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