Asymmetric visual representation of sex from human body shape

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Asymmetric visual representation of sex from human body shape. / Gandolfo, Marco; Downing, Paul.
Yn: Cognition, Cyfrol 205, 104436, 12.2020.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

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Gandolfo M, Downing P. Asymmetric visual representation of sex from human body shape. Cognition. 2020 Rhag;205:104436. Epub 2020 Medi 9. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2020.104436

Author

Gandolfo, Marco ; Downing, Paul. / Asymmetric visual representation of sex from human body shape. Yn: Cognition. 2020 ; Cyfrol 205.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Asymmetric visual representation of sex from human body shape

AU - Gandolfo, Marco

AU - Downing, Paul

PY - 2020/12

Y1 - 2020/12

N2 - We efficiently infer others’ states and traits from their appearance, and these inferences powerfully shape our social behaviour. One key trait is sex, which is strongly cued by the appearance of the body. What are the visual representations that link body shape to sex? Previous studies of visual sex judgment tasks find observers have a bias to report “male”, particularly for ambiguous stimuli. This finding implies a representational asymmetry – that for the processes that generate a sex percept, the default output is “male”, and “female” is determined by the presence of additional perceptual evidence. That is, female body shapes are positively coded by reference to a male default shape. This perspective makes a novel prediction in line with Treisman’s studies of visual search asymmetries: female body targets should be more readily detected amongst male distractors than vice versa. Across 10 experiments (N=32 each) we confirmed this prediction and ruled out alternative low-level explanations. The asymmetry was found with profile and frontal body silhouettes, frontal photographs, and schematised icons. Low-level confounds were controlled by balancing silhouette images for size and homogeneity, and by matching physical properties of photographs. The female advantage was nulled for inverted icons, but intact for inverted photographs, suggesting reliance on distinct cues to sex for different body depictions. Together, these findings demonstrate a principle of the perceptual coding that links bodily appearance with a significant social trait: the female body shape is coded as an extension of a male default. We conclude by offering a visual experience account of how these asymmetric representations arise in the first place.

AB - We efficiently infer others’ states and traits from their appearance, and these inferences powerfully shape our social behaviour. One key trait is sex, which is strongly cued by the appearance of the body. What are the visual representations that link body shape to sex? Previous studies of visual sex judgment tasks find observers have a bias to report “male”, particularly for ambiguous stimuli. This finding implies a representational asymmetry – that for the processes that generate a sex percept, the default output is “male”, and “female” is determined by the presence of additional perceptual evidence. That is, female body shapes are positively coded by reference to a male default shape. This perspective makes a novel prediction in line with Treisman’s studies of visual search asymmetries: female body targets should be more readily detected amongst male distractors than vice versa. Across 10 experiments (N=32 each) we confirmed this prediction and ruled out alternative low-level explanations. The asymmetry was found with profile and frontal body silhouettes, frontal photographs, and schematised icons. Low-level confounds were controlled by balancing silhouette images for size and homogeneity, and by matching physical properties of photographs. The female advantage was nulled for inverted icons, but intact for inverted photographs, suggesting reliance on distinct cues to sex for different body depictions. Together, these findings demonstrate a principle of the perceptual coding that links bodily appearance with a significant social trait: the female body shape is coded as an extension of a male default. We conclude by offering a visual experience account of how these asymmetric representations arise in the first place.

KW - social vision

KW - body perception

KW - sex perception

KW - visual search

KW - search asymmetry

KW - visual experience

U2 - 10.1016/j.cognition.2020.104436

DO - 10.1016/j.cognition.2020.104436

M3 - Article

VL - 205

JO - Cognition

JF - Cognition

SN - 0010-0277

M1 - 104436

ER -