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Faster but less careful prehension in presence of high, rather than low, social status attendees

FANTONI, CARLO
•
RIGUTTI, SARA
•
PICCOLI, VALENTINA
altro
CARNAGHI, ANDREA
2016
  • journal article

Periodico
PLOS ONE
Abstract
Ample evidence attests that social intention, elicited through gestures explicitly signaling a request of communicative intention, affects the patterning of hand movement kinematics. The current study goes beyond the effect of social intention and addresses whether the same action of reaching to grasp an object for placing it in an end target position within or without a monitoring attendee’s peripersonal space, can be moulded by pure social factors in general, and by social facilitation in particular. A motion tracking system (Optotrak Certus) was used to record motor acts. We carefully avoided the usage of communicative intention by keeping constant both the visual information and the positional uncertainty of the end target position, while we systematically varied the social status of the attendee (a high, or a low social status) in separated blocks. Only thirty acts performed in the presence of a different social status attendee, revealed a significant change of kinematic parameterization of hand movement, independently of the attendee's distance. The amplitude of peak velocity reached by the hand during the reach-to-grasp and the lift-to-place phase of the movement was larger in the high rather than in the low social status condition. By contrast, the deceleration time of the reach-to-grasp phase and the maximum grasp aperture was smaller in the high rather than in the low social status condition. These results indicated that the hand movement was faster but less carefully shaped in presence of a high, but not of a low social status attendee. This kinematic patterning suggests that being monitored by a high rather than a low social status attendee might lead participants to experience evaluation apprehension that informs the control of motor execution. Motor execution would rely more on feedforward motor control in the presence of a high social status human attendee, vs. feedback motor control, in the presence of a low social status attendee.
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0158095
WOS
WOS:000378858900032
Archivio
http://hdl.handle.net/11368/2882325
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-84978045065
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0158095
Diritti
open access
license:creative commons
license uri:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/it/
FVG url
https://arts.units.it/bitstream/11368/2882325/1/Fantoni_Rigutti_2016_journal.pone.0158095.PDF
Soggetti
  • Kinematic

  • Social facilitation

  • Social statu

  • Social cognition

  • Evaluation

  • Action

  • Perception

  • Apprehension

  • Reach-to-grasp

  • Lifting

  • Grasping

  • Motor control

  • Intention

  • Simulation

Scopus© citazioni
6
Data di acquisizione
Jun 7, 2022
Vedi dettagli
Web of Science© citazioni
6
Data di acquisizione
Mar 22, 2024
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