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Implied Movement in Static Images Reveals Biological Timing Processing1 1 Support: Francisco C. Nather received a Young Researcher Award from the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP – Protocol no. 2011/17981-9). José Lino O. Bueno received a Research Grant from the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq-PQ – Protocol no. 307485/2011-0). Vinicius Anelli received a FAPESP Undergraduate Research Scholarship (Protocol no. 2012/13067-3) and  CAPES/DAAD Exchange Scholarship. Guilherme P. Ennes received a RUSP Undergraduate Research Scholarship (Protocol no. 13.1.1651.59.0).

Movimento Implícito em Imagens Estáticas Revelou um Processamento Biológico do Tempo

Movimiento Implícito en Imágenes Estáticas Revelo un Procesamiento Biológico de lo Tiempo

Visual perception is adapted toward a better understanding of our own movements than those of non-conspecifics. The present study determined whether time perception is affected by pictures of different species by considering the evolutionary scale. Static (“S”) and implied movement (“M”) images of a dog, cheetah, chimpanzee, and man were presented to undergraduate students. S and M images of the same species were presented in random order or one after the other (S-M or M-S) for two groups of participants. Movement, Velocity, and Arousal semantic scales were used to characterize some properties of the images. Implied movement affected time perception, in which M images were overestimated. The results are discussed in terms of visual motion perception related to biological timing processing that could be established early in terms of the adaptation of humankind to the environment.

motion perception; time; evolution (biology)


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