Just the Sight of You: Postural Effects of Interpersonal Visual Contact at Sea
Identifieur interne : 000171 ( PascalFrancis/Corpus ); précédent : 000170; suivant : 000172Just the Sight of You: Postural Effects of Interpersonal Visual Contact at Sea
Auteurs : Manuel Varlet ; Fu-Chen Chen ; Thomas A. Stoffregen ; Cristina Alcantara ; Ludovic Marin ; Benoît G. BardySource :
- Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance [ 0096-1523 ] ; 2014.
Descripteurs français
- Pascal (Inist)
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
Abstract
The control of standing body posture is affected by mechanical perturbations, such as motion of the support surface. Postural activity also is responsive to subtle social factors: When 2 people interact there is spontaneous interpersonal coordination of their movements. We asked whether interpersonal postural coordination based on visual contact would be robust in the presence of mechanical perturbations that characterize sea travel. During an ocean voyage, pairs of participants stood facing together or facing apart. Interpersonal coordination of body sway was stronger when participants faced each other than when they faced apart. Furthermore, overall body movement was reduced when individuals faced together, suggesting that the sight of another person improved individuals' ability to compensate for ship motion. These findings provide the first evidence that the "soft" constraint of interpersonal visual contact can influence interpersonal postural coordination as people simultaneously adjust postural sway in response to powerful mechanical (i.e., "hard") constraints.
Notice en format standard (ISO 2709)
Pour connaître la documentation sur le format Inist Standard.
pA |
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Format Inist (serveur)
NO : | FRANCIS 15-0027019 INIST |
---|---|
ET : | Just the Sight of You: Postural Effects of Interpersonal Visual Contact at Sea |
AU : | VARLET (Manuel); CHEN (Fu-Chen); STOFFREGEN (Thomas A.); ALCANTARA (Cristina); MARIN (Ludovic); BARDY (Benoît G.) |
AF : | University of Montpellier 1/France (1 aut., 5 aut., 6 aut.); University of Western Sydney/Australie (1 aut.); National Pingtung University of Science and Technology/Taïwan (2 aut.); University of Minnesota/Etats-Unis (3 aut.); Universidade de São Paulo/Brésil (4 aut.) |
DT : | Publication en série; Niveau analytique |
SO : | Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance; ISSN 0096-1523; Coden JPHPDH; Etats-Unis; Da. 2014; Vol. 40; No. 6; Pp. 2310-2318; Bibl. 1 p.1/4 |
LA : | Anglais |
EA : | The control of standing body posture is affected by mechanical perturbations, such as motion of the support surface. Postural activity also is responsive to subtle social factors: When 2 people interact there is spontaneous interpersonal coordination of their movements. We asked whether interpersonal postural coordination based on visual contact would be robust in the presence of mechanical perturbations that characterize sea travel. During an ocean voyage, pairs of participants stood facing together or facing apart. Interpersonal coordination of body sway was stronger when participants faced each other than when they faced apart. Furthermore, overall body movement was reduced when individuals faced together, suggesting that the sight of another person improved individuals' ability to compensate for ship motion. These findings provide the first evidence that the "soft" constraint of interpersonal visual contact can influence interpersonal postural coordination as people simultaneously adjust postural sway in response to powerful mechanical (i.e., "hard") constraints. |
CC : | 770B04D |
FD : | Posture; Relation interpersonnelle; Interaction sociale; Performance; Etude expérimentale; Mouvement corporel; Homme; Contact visuel |
FG : | Motricité; Cognition |
ED : | Posture; Interpersonal relation; Social interaction; Performance; Experimental study; Body movement; Human; Visual contact |
EG : | Motricity; Cognition |
SD : | Postura; Relación interpersonal; Interacción social; Rendimiento; Estudio experimental; Movimiento corporal; Hombre; Contacto visual |
LO : | INIST-3032D.354000503596040180 |
ID : | 15-0027019 |
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<ET>Just the Sight of You: Postural Effects of Interpersonal Visual Contact at Sea</ET>
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<AF>University of Montpellier 1/France (1 aut., 5 aut., 6 aut.); University of Western Sydney/Australie (1 aut.); National Pingtung University of Science and Technology/Taïwan (2 aut.); University of Minnesota/Etats-Unis (3 aut.); Universidade de São Paulo/Brésil (4 aut.)</AF>
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