Ensemble coding of crowd speed using biological motion

Nguyen, Tram T. N., Vuong, Quoc C., Mather, George and Thornton, Ian M. (2021) Ensemble coding of crowd speed using biological motion. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 83 (3). pp. 1014-1035. ISSN 1943-3921

Full content URL: https://doi.org/10.3758/s13414-020-02163-3

This is the latest version of this item.

Documents
Ensemble coding of crowd speed using biological motion
Authors' Accepted Manuscript
[img]
[Download]
[img]
Preview
PDF
EnsembleCrowdSpeed_preprint.pdf - Whole Document

1MB
Item Type:Article
Item Status:Live Archive

Abstract

The accurate perception of human crowds is integral to social understanding and interaction. Previous studies have shown that observers are sensitive to several crowd characteristics such as average facial expression, gender, identity, joint attention, and heading direction. In two experiments, we examined ensemble perception of crowd speed using standard point-light walkers (PLW). Participants were asked to estimate the average speed of a crowd consisting of 12 figures moving at different speeds. In Experiment 1, trials of intact PLWs alternated with trials of scrambled PLWs with a viewing duration of 3 seconds. We found that ensemble processing of crowd speed could rely on local motion alone, although a globally intact configuration enhanced performance. In Experiment 2, observers estimated the average speed of intact-PLW crowds that were displayed at reduced viewing durations across five blocks of trials (between 2500 ms and 500 ms). Estimation of fast crowds was precise and accurate regardless of viewing duration, and we estimated that three to four walkers could still be integrated at 500 ms. For slow crowds, we found a systematic deterioration in performance as viewing time reduced, and performance at 500 ms could not be distinguished from a single-walker response strategy. Overall, our results suggest that rapid and accurate ensemble perception of crowd speed is possible, although sensitive to the precise speed range examined.

Keywords:Ensemble coding, Speed perception, Biological motion
Subjects:C Biological Sciences > C830 Experimental Psychology
Divisions:College of Social Science > School of Psychology
ID Code:50000
Deposited On:04 Jul 2022 10:11

Available Versions of this Item

Repository Staff Only: item control page