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How do you hold your mouse? Tracking the compatibility effect between hand posture and stimulus size

Academic Article
Publication Date:
2014
abstract:
In keeping with the idea that observing objects activates possible motor responses, several experiments revealed compatibility effects between the hand postures used to report a choice and some characteristics of the stimuli. The real-time dynamics of such compatibility effects are currently unknown. We tracked the time course of a categorization experiment requiring subjects to categorize as natural or artifact figures of big and small objects. Participants reported their choice using either a big mouse (requiring a power grip: a hand posture compatible with the grasping of big objects) or a small mouse (requiring a precision grip: a hand posture compatible with the grasping of small objects). We found a compatibility effect between the grip required by the mouse and the grip elicited by objects, even if it was irrelevant to the task. In a following experiment with the same paradigm, lexical stimuli failed to reproduce the same effect. Nevertheless, a compatibility effect mediated by the target-word category (artificial vs. natural) was observed. We discuss the results in the context of affordance effects literature and grounded theories of cognition.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Pezzulo, Giovanni; Barca, Laura
Authors of the University:
BARCA LAURA
PEZZULO GIOVANNI
Handle:
https://iris.cnr.it/handle/20.500.14243/249475
Published in:
PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Journal
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http://www.scopus.com/record/display.url?eid=2-s2.0-84908302019&origin=inward
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