Individual differences in athletes' perception of expressive body movements

Vassilis Sevdalis, Markus Raab

Publication: Contribution to journalJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Objectives: Understanding others' actions depends on the observer's individual characteristics and sensorimotor experience. Motor performance domains, such as sports and the performing arts, provide optimal situations to investigate the determinants of action perception. We investigated athletes' perceptual identification of expression intensity in body movements.
Design: A within-subjects design was used.
Method: Participants watched point-light displays (1000 ms long) depicting expressive and inexpressive dance movements. The task was to identify the dancer's intended expression intensity.
Results: The results indicate that expressive body movements can be reliably identified, with judgement accuracy correlating with self-report empathy indices, intuitive/deliberate decision-making preferences, and indices of sports training. Only years of sports training could predict perceptual identification accuracy.
Conclusions: We discuss the findings in relation to motor and cognitiveeemotional contributions to action simulation. The potential of cross-domain transfer of motor expertise for boosting perceptual judgements and a hierarchical role of factors eliciting action simulation are also outlined.
Original languageEnglish
JournalPsychology of Sport and Exercise
Volume24
Issue numberMay
Pages (from-to)111-117
Number of pages7
ISSN1469-0292
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016

Citation