Experience-dependent reshaping of body gender perception.

Psychol Res

Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience, Department of Languages and Literatures, Communication, Education and Society, University of Udine, via Margreth, 3, 33100, Udine, Italy.

Published: June 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Prolonged exposure to specific body types creates biased visual aftereffects in how we perceive gender, affecting both androgynous and distinctively gendered figures.
  • Three experiments demonstrated that viewing a female or male body influences the perception of androgynous bodies to appear more masculine or feminine based on the original exposure.
  • The results indicate that aftereffects are dependent on body orientation rather than identity, and suggest a connection between body gender perception biases and social communication deficits.

Article Abstract

Protracted exposure to specific stimuli causes biased visual aftereffects at both low- and high-level dimensions of a stimulus. Recently, it has been proposed that alterations of these aftereffects could play a role in body misperceptions. However, since previous studies have mainly addressed manipulations of body size, the relative contribution of low-level retinotopic and/or high-level object-based mechanisms is yet to be understood. In three experiments, we investigated visual aftereffects for body-gender perception, testing for the tuning of visual aftereffects across different characters and orientation. We found that exposure to a distinctively female (or male) body makes androgynous bodies appear as more masculine (or feminine) and that these aftereffects were not specific for the individual characteristics of the adapting body (Exp.1). Furthermore, exposure to only upright bodies (Exp.2) biased the perception of upright, but not of inverted bodies, while exposure to both upright and inverted bodies (Exp.3) biased perception for both. Finally, participants' sensitivity to body aftereffects was lower in individuals with greater communication deficits and deeper internalization of a male gender role. Overall, our data reveals the orientation-, but not identity-tuning of body-gender aftereffects and points to the association between alterations of the malleability of body gender perception and social deficits.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9090903PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00426-021-01569-4DOI Listing

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