Litcius/Paper detail

Life Detection From Biological Motion

Nikolaus F. Troje, Dorita H. F. Chang

2023Current Directions in Psychological Science39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Life motion, the active movements of people and other animals, contains a wealth of information that is potentially accessible to the visual system of an observer. Biological-motion point-light displays have been widely used to study both the information contained in life motion stimuli and the visual mechanisms that make use of it. Biological motion conveys motion-mediated dynamic shape, which in turn can be used for identification and recognition of the agent, but it also contains local visual invariants that humans and other animals use as a general detection system that signals the presence of other agents in the visual environment. Here, we review recent research on behavioral, neurophysiological, and genetic aspects of this life-detection system and discuss its functional significance in the light of earlier hypotheses.

Topics & Concepts

Biological motionMotion (physics)Motion detectionObserver (physics)Identification (biology)PsychologyComputer visionNeurophysiologyArtificial intelligencePoint (geometry)CommunicationComputer scienceNeuroscienceBiologyMathematicsBotanyPhysicsGeometryQuantum mechanicsNeural dynamics and brain functionAction Observation and SynchronizationMemory and Neural Mechanisms