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Upper- and lower-limb amputees show reduced levels of eeriness for images of prosthetic hands

Upper- and lower-limb amputees show reduced levels of eeriness for images of prosthetic hands
Upper- and lower-limb amputees show reduced levels of eeriness for images of prosthetic hands

The “uncanny phenomenon” describes the feeling of unease associated with seeing an image that is close to appearing human. Prosthetic hands in particular are well known to induce this effect. Little is known, however, about this phenomenon from the viewpoint of prosthesis users. We studied perceptions of eeriness and human-likeness for images of different types of mechanical, cosmetic, and anatomic hands in upper-limb prosthesis users (n=9), lower-limb prosthesis users (n=10), prosthetists (n=16), control participants with no prosthetic training (n=20), and control participants who were trained to use a myoelectric prosthetic hand simulator (n=23). Both the upper- and lower-limb prosthesis user groups showed a reduced uncanny phenomenon (i.e., significantly lower levels of eeriness) for cosmetic prosthetic hands compared to the other groups, with no concomitant reduction in how these stimuli were rated in terms of human-likeness. However, a similar effect was found neither for prosthetists with prolonged visual experience of prosthetic hands nor for the group with short-term training with the simulator. These findings in the prosthesis users therefore seem likely to be related to limb absence or prolonged experience with prostheses.

Embodiment, Perception, Prosthetic use, Uncanny phenomenon, Uncanny valley
1069-9384
1295-1302
Buckingham, Gavin
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Parr, Johnny
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Wood, Greg
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Day, Sarah
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Chadwell, Alix
c337930e-a6b5-43e3-8ca5-eed1d2d71340
Head, John
cf34a318-8e41-41c4-af54-b3d970dfd24f
Galpin, Adam
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Kenney, Laurence
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Kyberd, Peter
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Gowen, Emma
671c6bdd-29af-4c76-b5cf-f2102d99a8d7
Poliakoff, Ellen
3f7440a4-a200-4726-b618-08163e3ddbe8
Buckingham, Gavin
8e269e2e-6387-4290-a620-a0b3b98f0adc
Parr, Johnny
cf0b08c1-945e-4e35-a217-099f295b6a31
Wood, Greg
01d87c17-cd95-4229-93a5-0602fbe16fa0
Day, Sarah
3af2930a-d2cc-436d-8ff6-a2415815f4ad
Chadwell, Alix
c337930e-a6b5-43e3-8ca5-eed1d2d71340
Head, John
cf34a318-8e41-41c4-af54-b3d970dfd24f
Galpin, Adam
c3157315-5bd6-4123-9044-a379ebc7ae62
Kenney, Laurence
83d42411-ccbe-4b21-828e-9abd9775e47d
Kyberd, Peter
60969010-5eba-4a62-b2a3-6d49f12dcce1
Gowen, Emma
671c6bdd-29af-4c76-b5cf-f2102d99a8d7
Poliakoff, Ellen
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Buckingham, Gavin, Parr, Johnny, Wood, Greg, Day, Sarah, Chadwell, Alix, Head, John, Galpin, Adam, Kenney, Laurence, Kyberd, Peter, Gowen, Emma and Poliakoff, Ellen (2019) Upper- and lower-limb amputees show reduced levels of eeriness for images of prosthetic hands. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 26 (4), 1295-1302. (doi:10.3758/s13423-019-01612-x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The “uncanny phenomenon” describes the feeling of unease associated with seeing an image that is close to appearing human. Prosthetic hands in particular are well known to induce this effect. Little is known, however, about this phenomenon from the viewpoint of prosthesis users. We studied perceptions of eeriness and human-likeness for images of different types of mechanical, cosmetic, and anatomic hands in upper-limb prosthesis users (n=9), lower-limb prosthesis users (n=10), prosthetists (n=16), control participants with no prosthetic training (n=20), and control participants who were trained to use a myoelectric prosthetic hand simulator (n=23). Both the upper- and lower-limb prosthesis user groups showed a reduced uncanny phenomenon (i.e., significantly lower levels of eeriness) for cosmetic prosthetic hands compared to the other groups, with no concomitant reduction in how these stimuli were rated in terms of human-likeness. However, a similar effect was found neither for prosthetists with prolonged visual experience of prosthetic hands nor for the group with short-term training with the simulator. These findings in the prosthesis users therefore seem likely to be related to limb absence or prolonged experience with prostheses.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 10 June 2019
Published date: 15 August 2019
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2019, The Author(s).
Keywords: Embodiment, Perception, Prosthetic use, Uncanny phenomenon, Uncanny valley

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 483960
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483960
ISSN: 1069-9384
PURE UUID: bd7ed3c9-38b0-472e-a147-cc670d288f19
ORCID for Alix Chadwell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9101-5202

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 07 Nov 2023 18:54
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:12

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Contributors

Author: Gavin Buckingham
Author: Johnny Parr
Author: Greg Wood
Author: Sarah Day
Author: Alix Chadwell ORCID iD
Author: John Head
Author: Adam Galpin
Author: Laurence Kenney
Author: Peter Kyberd
Author: Emma Gowen
Author: Ellen Poliakoff

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