The authors have produced a ground-breaking book that is the absolute go-to resource for anyone interested in learning about the origins and the direction for future research in this area...This is a must-read for graduate students in psychology and communication studies, as well as students who are interested in the visual perception of the human body.

Doody's Notes

The human body has long been a rich source of inspiration for the arts, and artists have long recognized the body's special status. While the scientific study of body perception also has an important history, recent technological advances have triggered an explosion of research on the visual perception of the human body in motion, or as it is traditionally called, biological motion perception. Now reaching a point of burgeoning inter-disciplinary focus, biological motion perception research is poised to transform our understanding of person construal. Indeed, several factors highlight a privileged role for the human body as one of the most critical classes of stimuli affecting social perception. Human bodies in motion, for example, are among the most frequent moving stimulus in our environment. They can be readily perceived at a physical distance or visual vantage that precludes face perception. Moreover, body motion conveys meaningful psychological information such as social categories, emotion state, intentions, and underlying dispositions. Thus, body perception appears to serve as a first-pass filter for a vast array of social judgments from the routine (e.g., perceived friendliness in interactions) to the grave (e.g., perceived threat by law enforcement). This book provides an exciting integration of theory and findings that clarify how the human body is perceived by observers.
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The scientific study of the human body has burgeoned in recent years, and scholars from wide-ranging disciplines are now seeking to understand just how much information can be conveyed by the human body in motion. This volume sheds light on the potency of the human body to inform our most basic perceptions of one another.
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I. Introduction ; Chapter 1: Making Great Strides: Advances in Research on the Perception of the Human Body ; Chapter 2: Gunnar Johansson, Events, and Biological Motion ; II. Psychophysics ; Chapter 3: Top-Down versus Bottom-up Processing of Biological Motion ; Chapter 4: Seeing You through Me: Creating Self-Other Correspondences for Body Perception ; Chapter 5: What Does
Les mer
The authors have produced a ground-breaking book that is the absolute go-to resource for anyone interested in learning about the origins and the direction for future research in this area...This is a must-read for graduate students in psychology and communication studies, as well as students who are interested in the visual perception of the human body.
Les mer
"In this excellent collection Johnson (communication and psychology, UCLA) and Shiffrar (psychology, Rutgers) deal with the subject of biological motion... Those in search of a comprehensive overview of biological motion perception need search no further. Summing Up: Highly recommended." -- CHOICE "The authors have produced a ground-breaking book that is the absolute go-to resource for anyone interested in learning about the origins and the direction for future research in this area. This scholarly book spans decades of empirical research findings in order to foster a better understanding of how we perceive others and interpret their attributes through the observation of human movement. This is a must-read for graduate students in psychology and communication studies, as well as students who are interested in the visual perception of the human body." --Michael S. Goldsby, PhD, CCRP, Doody's Health Sciences Book Review
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Selling point: The book describes cutting edge scientific findings. Selling point: The volume includes scholars from a variety of disciplines. Selling point: The book will have popular appeal, but scientific accuracy (unlike many of the "Body Language" books currently on the market).
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Kerri L. Johnson is Assistant Professor of Communication Studies and Psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her research is focused on how people form impressions of one another by using cues in the face and body. Her lab tests both the production and perception of cues that convey identities such as sex, race, age, and sexual orientation. Johnson is particularly interested in how and why a variety of cues impinge on observers' judgments of other people. To study this, she uses a variety of methods -- such as corneal reflection eye tracking, three--dimensional motion capture, computer mouse tracking, and computer animation -- to determine how social perceptions are formed. Maggie Shiffrar is Professor of Psychology at Rutgers University. Her research is focused on how the visual system interprets moving objects. To develop a unified understanding of visual system function, members of her laboratory examine the relationships between visual physiology and visual perception for both "high" and "low" levels of analysis. This includes behavioral studies of the visual analysis of human movement, implicit memory of objects in motion, and the role of image segmentation cues in motion coherence and visual memory for shape. At present, she is studying how visual experience, motor experience, and social processes all contribute to the visual analysis of human movement.
Les mer
Selling point: The book describes cutting edge scientific findings. Selling point: The volume includes scholars from a variety of disciplines. Selling point: The book will have popular appeal, but scientific accuracy (unlike many of the "Body Language" books currently on the market).
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780195393705
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
953 gr
Høyde
188 mm
Bredde
257 mm
Dybde
36 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
438

Biographical note

Kerri L. Johnson is Assistant Professor of Communication Studies and Psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her research is focused on how people form impressions of one another by using cues in the face and body. Her lab tests both the production and perception of cues that convey identities such as sex, race, age, and sexual orientation. Johnson is particularly interested in how and why a variety of cues impinge on observers' judgments of other people. To study this, she uses a variety of methods -- such as corneal reflection eye tracking, three--dimensional motion capture, computer mouse tracking, and computer animation -- to determine how social perceptions are formed. Maggie Shiffrar is Professor of Psychology at Rutgers University. Her research is focused on how the visual system interprets moving objects. To develop a unified understanding of visual system function, members of her laboratory examine the relationships between visual physiology and visual perception for both "high" and "low" levels of analysis. This includes behavioral studies of the visual analysis of human movement, implicit memory of objects in motion, and the role of image segmentation cues in motion coherence and visual memory for shape. At present, she is studying how visual experience, motor experience, and social processes all contribute to the visual analysis of human movement.