The Department of Cognitive Science
cordially invites you
to the public defense of the PhD thesis
INVESTIGATING THE PRODUCTION AND PERCEPTION OF MOVEMENT CUES IN JOINT ACTION
by
Luke McEllin
PRIMARY SUPERVISOR: Natalie Sebanz
SECONDARY SUPERVISOR:
Gunther Knoblich
Members of the Dissertation Committee:
Agnes Kovacs, Chair, CEU
Emily Cross, external examiner, University of Glasgow
Giovanni Pezzulo, external examiner, Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC-CNR), Rome
abstract
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Abstract The movements of those engaged in social interactions are laden with meaning,
and reflect a whole host of mental states, including intentions and attitudes towards a co-actor. The aim of this thesis was to investigate how the movements of actors engaged in joint actions provide us with information about their informative intentions,
and the interpersonal relations of those interacting with each other. Our first study investigated how actors modulate the kinematics of their actions in order to provide informative cues to co-actors, and demonstrated that actions that are identical instrumentally
can have different kinematic signatures depending on the informative intentions of the actor (i.e. the intention to coordinate, or the intention to teach). Our second study set out to investigate whether or not observers are able to use kinematic cues to understand
an actor’s informative intentions, and demonstrated that not only can observers detect the presence of informative intentions on the basis of movement cues, but they can also discriminate between different informative intentions. Our third study aimed to investigate
how different types of interpersonal synchrony affect third person perception of the relations between two actors, and found that the movement cues reflecting different types of synchrony have a direct effect on our perception of a performance in terms of
the affiliation between the performers, and how aesthetically pleasing we find these performances. In the final section of this thesis, our findings are discussed with respect to their implications for theories of direct perception of mental states, as well
as their applications to our understanding of teaching and learning, and human robot interaction.
The defense will take place at October Hall,
V. Budapest, Október 6 street 7, ground floor
on Thursday, November 29, at 10 am
organized by the Department of Cognitive Science
Györgyné Finta (Réka)
Department Coordinator
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Central European University
Department of Cognitive Science
H-1051 Budapest
Oktober 6 utca 7.
tel: (36-1) 887-5138
fax: (36-1) 887-5010
http://www.ceu.edu
http://cognitivescience.ceu.edu