Mood Influences the Perception of the Sitting Affordance

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TitreMood Influences the Perception of the Sitting Affordance
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuteursVegas C, Laurent E
JournalATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS
Volume84
Pagination270-288
Date PublishedJAN
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1943-3921
Mots-clésAction, ecological psychology, mood, Perception, reachability
Résumé

This study tested the influence of mood on the perception of the sitting affordance in two experiments. The objective of Experiment 1 was to evaluate participants' perception of the sitting affordance, without mood induction. Forty-three participants assessed their maximum sitting height (SHmax) from different seat heights (perceptual SHmax) before performing the action (motor SHmax). They accurately perceived the sitting affordance, in body-scaled intrinsic units. Indeed, participants all perceived they could sit as long as the seat height did not exceed 82% (perceptual pi c) of their total leg length (L), while the actual value of this intrinsic relationship was 83% (motor pi c). In Experiment 2, forty participants were subjected to a mood induction procedure before performing the task employed in Experiment 1. Neutral participants accurately perceived the sitting affordance, as their perceptual pi c was equivalent to their motor pi c. However, both joyful and sad participants had their perceptual pi c significantly lower than their motor pi c. These differences between mood groups were not explained by a variation in maximal effective action capabilities. Indeed, participants had equivalent motor pi c, whatever their mood. Two interpretations are offered to explain how joyful and sad moods could influence the accuracy of affordance perception. The first is based on their potential effect on organism's energy level. The second is related to the disruption of participants' attunement to optical variables relevant for action guidance and/or to perceptual-motor calibration.

DOI10.3758/s13414-021-02419-6