0000000000749754

AUTHOR

Christoph Von Castell

showing 14 related works from this author

Visual and postural eye-height information is flexibly coupled in the perception of virtual environments.

2021

We conducted two experiments to investigate how observers integrate postural and visual eye-height information when estimating the layout of interior space. In Experiment 1, we varied postural and visual eye-height information independently of each other in a virtual-reality setup. Observers estimated the width, depth, and height of simulated rooms. All dimensions were perceived as larger when the virtual visual eye-height corresponded to sitting on the floor as compared with standing upright. In contrast, the estimates remained widely unaffected by the observer's physical posture (likewise sitting vs. standing). In Experiment 2, we studied effects of the viewing condition (real vs. virtual…

medicine.medical_specialtyVisual perceptionObserver (quantum physics)media_common.quotation_subjectPostureVirtual RealityExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAdaptation (eye)AudiologyVirtual realitySittingBehavioral NeuroscienceArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)PerceptionVisual PerceptionmedicineHumansContrast (vision)PerceptionCuesPsychologyPostural BalanceSensory cuemedia_commonJournal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance
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Interpersonal Distance in the SARS-CoV-2 Crisis

2020

Background Mandatory rules for social distancing to curb the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic require individuals to maintain a critical interpersonal distance above 1.5 m. However, this contradicts our natural preference, which is closer to 1 m for non-intimate encounters, for example, when asking a stranger for directions. Objective This review addresses how humans typically regulate interpersonal distances, in order to highlight the challenges of enforcing atypically large interpersonal distances. Method To understand the challenges posed by social distancing requirements, we integrate relevant contributions from visual perception, social perception, and human factors. Results To date, research on pr…

discomfort2019-20 coronavirus outbreakSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Pneumonia ViralBehavioural sciences050109 social psychologyHuman Factors and ErgonomicsInterpersonal communicationMandatory Programs050105 experimental psychologyBehavioral NeurosciencePersonal SpacePersonal spacePandemicHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSocial ChangeSocial BehaviorPandemicsApplied PsychologySARS-CoV-2Social distanceCommunication05 social sciencesSocial changeCOVID-19interpersonal distancePsychological DistanceVisual PerceptionHow The HF/E Knowledge Base Can Contribute to Addressing The Coronavirus CrisisproxemicsPsychologyCoronavirus InfectionsSocial psychologyBehavioral SciencesHuman Factors
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Adapting to the pandemic: longitudinal effects of social restrictions on time perception and boredom during the Covid-19 pandemic in Germany

2022

AbstractWith the Covid-19 pandemic, many governments introduced nationwide lockdowns that disrupted people’s daily routines and promoted social isolation. We applied a longitudinal online survey to investigate the mid-term effects of the mandated restrictions on the perceived passage of time (PPT) and boredom during and after a strict lockdown in Germany. One week after the beginning of the lockdown in March 2020, respondents reported a slower PPT and increased boredom compared to the pre-pandemic level. However, in the course of the lockdown, PPT accelerated and boredom decreased again until August 2020. Then, in October 2020, when incidence rates sharply rose and new restrictions were int…

AdultMaleTime FactorsAdolescentScienceArticleYoung AdultGermanyAdaptation PsychologicalPsychologyHumansheterocyclic compoundsLongitudinal StudiesMultidisciplinaryIncidenceQRCOVID-19Risk factorsSocial IsolationBoredom150 PsychologieCommunicable Disease ControlTime PerceptionMedicineFemale150 PsychologyStress PsychologicalScientific Reports
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Interpersonal Distance Regulation and Approach-Avoidance Reactions Are Altered in Psychopathy

2019

In this study, we examined the impact of psychopathy on approach-avoidance reactions and interpersonal distance (IPD) in response to social cues. We selected a student sample and measured psychopathy via self-report. Participants were immersed in a virtual environment in which a virtual person displayed either angry or happy facial expressions. In the first experiment, participants had to walk toward the virtual person until a comfortable IPD had been reached. In the second experiment, participants had to push or pull a joystick in response to the facial expression of the virtual person. Our results suggest that psychopathy does not change average IPD but does impair its regulation. That i…

05 social sciencesPsychopathySample (statistics)Interpersonal communicationSocial cuemedicine.disease050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesClinical Psychology0302 clinical medicinemedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical Psychological Science
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Wall patterns influence the perception of interior space

2019

The texture of an object’s surface influences its perceived spatial extent. For example, Hermann von Helmholtz reported that a square patch with black and white stripes appears elongated perpendicular to the stripes’ orientation. This time-honoured finding stands in contrast with more recent recommendations by interior-design experts who suggest that stripe wall patterns make rooms appear elongated in the direction parallel to the stripes’ orientation. In a series of four experiments, we presented stripe wall patterns and varied the orientation of the stripes (horizontal vs. vertical) and their density (number of stripes per degree of visual angle). Subjects estimated the width and height …

AdultMaleSurface (mathematics)AdolescentPhysiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyGeometryTexture (geology)Young AdultCondensed Matter::SuperconductivityPhysiology (medical)Orientation (geometry)PerceptionPerpendicularHumansContrast (vision)Pattern orientationOrientation SpatialGeneral Psychologymedia_commonPhysicsGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologySpace PerceptionFemaleVisual anglePhotic StimulationInterior Design and FurnishingsQuarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
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The effect of furnishing on perceived spatial dimensions and spaciousness of interior space

2014

Despite the ubiquity of interior space design, there is virtually no scientific research on the influence of furnishing on the perception of interior space. We conducted two experiments in which observers were asked to estimate the spatial dimensions (size of the room dimensions in meters and centimeters) and to judge subjective spaciousness of various rooms. Experiment 1 used true-to-scale model rooms with a square surface area. Furnishing affected both the perceived height and the spaciousness judgments. The furnished room was perceived as higher but less spacious. In Experiment 2, rooms with different square surface areas and constant physical height were presented in virtual reality. Fu…

AdultMaleAdolescentVisionScienceDistance PerceptionQRBiology and Life SciencesExperimental PsychologyMiddle AgedJudgmentYoung Adult150 PsychologieMedicinePsychologyHumansSensory PerceptionFemale150 PsychologySize PerceptionResearch ArticleNeuroscienceInterior Design and Furnishings
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Measuring Perceived Ceiling Height in a Visual Comparison Task

2017

When judging interior space, a dark ceiling is judged to be lower than a light ceiling. The method of metric judgments (e.g., on a centimetre scale) that has typically been used in such tasks may reflect a genuine perceptual effect or it may reflect a cognitively mediated impression. We employed a height-matching method in which perceived ceiling height had to be matched with an adjustable pillar, thus obtaining psychometric functions that allowed for an estimation of the point of subjective equality (PSE) and the difference limen (DL). The height-matching method developed in this paper allows for a direct visual match and does not require metric judgment. It has the added advantage of pro…

AdultMaleVisual perceptionAdolescentPsychometricsScale (ratio)Physiology050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCeiling (cloud)050105 experimental psychologyTask (project management)JudgmentYoung AdultPhysiology (medical)PsychophysicsPsychophysicsHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesComputer visionGeneral PsychologyAnalysis of VarianceCommunicationbusiness.industryDistance Perception05 social sciencesVisual comparisonGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologySpace PerceptionMetric (mathematics)FemaleArtificial intelligenceInterior spacebusinessPsychologyPhotic StimulationQuarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
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Psychopathy and the Regulation of Interpersonal Distance

2018

Psychopathic traits are often associated with interpersonal and affective deficits. This study examined the impact of psychopathy on judgments of comfortable egocentric interpersonal distance (Experiment 1) and exocentric interpersonal distance (Experiment 2). We selected a student sample and measured psychopathy via self-report. To study spatial behavior under highly controlled conditions, these participants were immersed in a virtual environment. In Experiment 1, they approached a virtual person with angry or happy facial expression until a comfortable distance for conversation was reached. In Experiment 2, participants adjusted a comfortable distance between two avatars. Our results sug…

050103 clinical psychologyClinical Psychology05 social sciencesPsychopathymedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesInterpersonal communicationPsychologymedicine.disease050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychologyClinical Psychological Science
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How facial masks alter the interaction of gaze direction, head orientation, and emotion recognition

2022

The COVID-19 pandemic has altered the way we interact with each other: mandatory mask-wearing obscures facial information that is crucial for emotion recognition. Whereas the influence of wearing a mask on emotion recognition has been repeatedly investigated, little is known about the impact on interaction effects among emotional signals and other social signals. Therefore, the current study sought to explore how gaze direction, head orientation, and emotional expression interact with respect to emotion perception, and how these interactions are altered by wearing a face mask. In two online experiments, we presented face stimuli from the Radboud Faces Database displaying different facial ex…

150 PsychologieGeneral Neuroscience150 PsychologyFrontiers in Neuroscience
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Which Attribute of Ceiling Color Influences Perceived Room Height?

2018

Objective:We investigate effects of the hue, saturation, and luminance of ceiling color on the perceived height of interior spaces.Background:Previous studies have reported that the perceived height of an interior space is influenced by the luminance of the ceiling, but not by the luminance contrast between ceiling and walls: brighter ceilings appeared higher than darker ceilings, irrespective of wall and floor luminance. However, these studies used solely achromatic colors. We report an experiment in which we extend these findings to effects of chromatic ceiling colors.Methods:We presented stereoscopic room simulations on a head-mounted display (Oculus Rift DK2) and varied hue (red, green,…

AdultBrightnessbusiness.industry05 social sciencesHuman Factors and ErgonomicsCeiling (cloud)Luminance050105 experimental psychologyContrast Sensitivity03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineOpticsHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesInterior spacebusinessColor PerceptionSize Perception030217 neurology & neurosurgeryApplied PsychologyMathematicsHueHuman Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
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Cognitive performance and emotion are indifferent to ambient color

2017

Folklore has it that ambient color has the power to relax or arouse the observer and enhance performance when executing cognitive tasks. We picked a number of commercially available colors that allegedly have the power to alter cognitive performance and the emotional state, and exposed subjects to them while solving a battery of cognitive tasks. The colors were “Cool Down Pink”, which is said to produce relaxing effects and reduce effort, “Energy Red”, allegedly enhancing performance via increased arousal, “Relaxing Blue”, which is said to enhance attention and concentration, as well as white as a control. In a between-subjects design, a total of 170 high school students carried out five ta…

Elementary cognitive taskGeneral Chemical Engineering05 social sciences050109 social psychologyHuman Factors and ErgonomicsGeneral Chemistry050105 experimental psychologyMental rotationArousal0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesNumber seriesEffects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performancePsychologySocial psychologyCognitive psychologyColor Research & Application
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SupplementaryMaterial_CeilingColor_finalSubmission – Supplemental material for Which Attribute of Ceiling Color Influences Perceived Room Height?

2018

Supplemental material, SupplementaryMaterial_CeilingColor_finalSubmission for Which Attribute of Ceiling Color Influences Perceived Room Height? by Christoph von Castell, Heiko Hecht and Daniel Oberfeld in Human Factors: The Journal of Human Factors and Ergonomics Society

FOS: PsychologyFOS: Other engineering and technologies170199 Psychology not elsewhere classified99999 Engineering not elsewhere classified
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The anisotropy of personal space.

2019

Violations of personal space are associated with discomfort. However, the exact function linking the magnitude of discomfort to interpersonal distance has not yet been specified. In this study, we explore whether interpersonal distance and discomfort are isotropic with respect to uncomfortably far or close distances. We also extend previous findings with regard to intrusions into personal space as well as maintenance of distances outside of personal space. We presented subjects with 15 interpersonal distances ranging from 40 to 250 cm and obtained verbal and joystick-based ratings of discomfort. Whereas discomfort rose immediately when personal space was entered, the gradient was less steep…

AdultMaleResearch ValidityTopographyScienceMaterials ScienceMaterial PropertiesEmotionsSocial SciencesResearch and Analysis MethodsStatistical InferencePersonal SpaceYoung AdultMathematical and Statistical TechniquesTask Performance and AnalysisPsychologyHumansStatistical MethodsStatistical DataAnalysis of VarianceLandformsBehaviorPhysicsStatisticsQRBiology and Life SciencesReproducibility of ResultsGeomorphologyFearResearch AssessmentMiddle AgedCondensed Matter Physics150 PsychologiePhysical SciencesEarth SciencesAnisotropyMedicineFemale150 PsychologyMathematicsResearch ArticleValleysPLoS ONE
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Inverting the Wollaston Illusion: Gaze Direction Attracts Perceived Head Orientation

2021

In the early 19th century, William H. Wollaston impressed the Royal Society of London with engravings of portraits. He manipulated facial features, such as the nose, and thereby dramatically changed the perceived gaze direction, although the eye region with iris and eye socket had remained unaltered. This Wollaston illusion can be thought of as head orientation attracting perceived gaze direction when the eye region is unchanged. In naturalistic viewing, the eye region changes with head orientation and typically produces a repulsion effect. Here we explore if there is a flip side to the illusion. Does the gaze direction also alter the perceived direction of the head? We used copies of the o…

genetic structuresfacial features150 Psychologiegaze directionWollaston illusionPsychologyvisual perceptionStandard Articlesense organs150 PsychologyBF1-990i-Perception
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