Gunnar Johansson’s research while affiliated with Uppsala University and other places

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Publications (1)


Johansson, G.: Visual perception of biological motion and a model for its analysis. Atten. Percept. Psychophys. 14, 201-211
  • Article

June 1973

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1,051 Reads

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4,131 Citations

Attention Perception & Psychophysics

Gunnar Johansson

This paper reports the first phase of a research program on visual perception of motion patterns characteristic of living organisms in locomotion. Such motion patterns in animals and men are termed here as biological motion. They are characterized by a far higher degree of complexity than the patterns of simple mechanical motions usually studied in our laboratories. In everyday perceptions, the visual information from biological motion and from the corresponding figurative contour patterns (the shape of the body) are intermingled. A method for studying information from the motion pattern per se without interference with the form aspect was devised. In short, the motion of the living body was represented by a few bright spots describing the motions of the main joints. It is found that 10–12 such elements in adequate motion combinations in proximal stimulus evoke a compelling impression of human walking, running, dancing, etc. The kinetic-geometric model for visual vector analysis originally developed in the study of perception of motion combinations of the mechanical type was applied to these biological motion patterns. The validity of this model in the present context was experimentally tested and the results turned out to be highly positive.

Citations (1)


... In the temporal domain, body motion processes have mainly been 57 investigated with point-light-display (PLD) stimuli, which present non-naturalistic, 58 moving dots to mimic biological body motion (Johansson, 1973). Several PLD 59 studies in humans have found clear differences between biological and scramble 60 motion, which are apparent in negative ERP components such as N1 and N2 (Hirai 61 et al., 2003(Hirai 61 et al., , 2005 Further ERP research suggests that as young as eight months, the human 64 brain may already discriminate biological PLD motion (Reid et al., 2008). ...

Reference:

Natural body-selective motion processing in humans: Evidence from event-related potentials
Johansson, G.: Visual perception of biological motion and a model for its analysis. Atten. Percept. Psychophys. 14, 201-211
  • Citing Article
  • June 1973

Attention Perception & Psychophysics