Big brother: the effects of surveillance on fundamental aspects of social vision.

IF 3.1 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, BIOLOGICAL
Neuroscience of Consciousness Pub Date : 2024-12-10 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1093/nc/niae039
Kiley Seymour, Jarrod McNicoll, Roger Koenig-Robert
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Despite the dramatic rise of surveillance in our societies, only limited research has examined its effects on humans. While most research has focused on voluntary behaviour, no study has examined the effects of surveillance on more fundamental and automatic aspects of human perceptual awareness and cognition. Here, we show that being watched on CCTV markedly impacts a hardwired and involuntary function of human sensory perception-the ability to consciously detect faces. Using the method of continuous flash suppression (CFS), we show that when people are surveilled (N = 24), they are quicker than controls (N = 30) to detect faces. An independent control experiment (N = 42) ruled out an explanation based on demand characteristics and social desirability biases. These findings show that being watched impacts not only consciously controlled behaviours but also unconscious, involuntary visual processing. Our results have implications concerning the impacts of surveillance on basic human cognition as well as public mental health.

老大哥:监视对社会视野基本方面的影响。
尽管监控在我们的社会中急剧增加,但只有有限的研究调查了它对人类的影响。虽然大多数研究都集中在自愿行为上,但没有研究调查监视对人类感知意识和认知的更基本和自动方面的影响。在这里,我们展示了在闭路电视上观看会显著影响人类感官感知的一种固有的、不自觉的功能——有意识地识别人脸的能力。使用连续闪光抑制(CFS)的方法,我们表明,当人们被监视(N = 24)时,他们比对照组(N = 30)更快地识别人脸。一项独立对照实验(N = 42)排除了基于需求特征和社会可取性偏差的解释。这些发现表明,被观察不仅会影响有意识的控制行为,还会影响无意识的、非自愿的视觉处理。我们的研究结果对监测对人类基本认知和公众心理健康的影响具有启示意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neuroscience of Consciousness
Neuroscience of Consciousness Psychology-Clinical Psychology
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
2.40%
发文量
16
审稿时长
19 weeks
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