Effects of acute stress on biological motion perception

Wang J, Shi F, Yu L (2024)
PLOS ONE 19(9): e0310502.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
Download
OA 2.07 MB
Autor*in
Wang, Jifu; Shi, Fang; Yu, LinUniBi
Abstract / Bemerkung

Biological motion perception is an essential part of the cognitive process. Stress can affect the cognitive process. The present study explored the intrinsic ERP features of the effects of acute psychological stress on biological motion perception. The results contributed scientific evidence for the adaptive behavior changes under acute stress. After a mental arithmetic task was used to induce stress, the paradigm of point-light displays was used to evaluate biological motion perception. Longer reaction time and lower accuracy were found in the inverted walking condition than in the upright walking condition, which was called the "inversion effect". The P2 peak amplitude and the LPP mean amplitude were significantly higher in the local inverted perception than in the local upright walking condition. Compared to the control condition, the stress condition induced lower RT, shorter P1 peak latency of biological motion perception, lower P2 peak amplitude and LPP mean amplitude, and higher N330 peak amplitude. There was an "inversion effect" in biological motion perception. This effect was related to the structural characteristics of biological motion perception but unrelated to the state of acute psychological stress. Acute psychological stress accelerated the reaction time and enhanced attention control of biological motion perception. Attention resources were used earlier, and less attentional investment was made in the early stage of biological motion perception processing. In the late stage, a continuous weakening of inhibition was shown in the parieto-occipital area.

Erscheinungsjahr
2024
Zeitschriftentitel
PLOS ONE
Band
19
Ausgabe
9
Art.-Nr.
e0310502
eISSN
1932-6203
Finanzierungs-Informationen
Open-Access-Publikationskosten wurden durch die Universität Bielefeld gefördert.
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2992695

Zitieren

Wang J, Shi F, Yu L. Effects of acute stress on biological motion perception. PLOS ONE. 2024;19(9): e0310502.
Wang, J., Shi, F., & Yu, L. (2024). Effects of acute stress on biological motion perception. PLOS ONE, 19(9), e0310502. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0310502
Wang, Jifu, Shi, Fang, and Yu, Lin. 2024. “Effects of acute stress on biological motion perception”. PLOS ONE 19 (9): e0310502.
Wang, J., Shi, F., and Yu, L. (2024). Effects of acute stress on biological motion perception. PLOS ONE 19:e0310502.
Wang, J., Shi, F., & Yu, L., 2024. Effects of acute stress on biological motion perception. PLOS ONE, 19(9): e0310502.
J. Wang, F. Shi, and L. Yu, “Effects of acute stress on biological motion perception”, PLOS ONE, vol. 19, 2024, : e0310502.
Wang, J., Shi, F., Yu, L.: Effects of acute stress on biological motion perception. PLOS ONE. 19, : e0310502 (2024).
Wang, Jifu, Shi, Fang, and Yu, Lin. “Effects of acute stress on biological motion perception”. PLOS ONE 19.9 (2024): e0310502.
Alle Dateien verfügbar unter der/den folgenden Lizenz(en):
Creative Commons Namensnennung 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0):
Volltext(e)
Access Level
OA Open Access
Zuletzt Hochgeladen
2024-09-19T10:56:39Z
MD5 Prüfsumme
f454b2b9c17697b22e49da55fe0c2560


Zitationen in Europe PMC

Daten bereitgestellt von Europe PubMed Central.

References

Daten bereitgestellt von Europe PubMed Central.

Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Web of Science

Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®
Quellen

PMID: 39292714
PubMed | Europe PMC

Suchen in

Google Scholar