Body posture and gender impact neural processing of power-related words

April H. Bailey, S. Kelly
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT Judging others’ power facilitates successful social interaction. Both gender and body posture have been shown to influence judgments of another’s power. However, little is known about how these two cues interact when they conflict or how they influence early processing. The present study investigated this question during very early processing of power-related words using event-related potentials (ERPs). Participants viewed images of women and men in dominant and submissive postures that were quickly followed by dominant or submissive words. Gender and posture both modulated neural responses in the N2 latency range to dominant words, but for submissive words they had little impact. Thus, in the context of dual-processing theories of person perception, information extracted from both behavior (i.e., posture) and from category membership (i.e., gender) are recruited side-by-side to impact word processing.
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身体姿势和性别影响权力相关词汇的神经加工
判断他人的权力有助于成功的社会交往。研究表明,性别和身体姿势都会影响对他人能力的判断。然而,对于这两种线索在冲突时如何相互作用,以及它们如何影响早期加工,人们知之甚少。本研究利用事件相关电位(event- correlation potential, ERPs)对权力相关词的早期加工过程进行了研究。参与者观看了男性和女性处于支配和服从姿势的图片,紧接着是支配或服从的词语。性别和姿势对主导词N2潜伏期的神经反应均有调节作用,但对顺从词的影响不大。因此,在人知觉的双加工理论背景下,从行为(即姿势)和类别隶属(即性别)中提取的信息被同时招募来影响文字处理。
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