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Dive into the research topics where Sara Rigutti is active.

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Featured researches published by Sara Rigutti.


PeerJ | 2016

Bodily action penetrates affective perception

Carlo Fantoni; Sara Rigutti; Walter Gerbino

Fantoni & Gerbino (2014) showed that subtle postural shifts associated with reaching can have a strong hedonic impact and affect how actors experience facial expressions of emotion. Using a novel Motor Action Mood Induction Procedure (MAMIP), they found consistent congruency effects in participants who performed a facial emotion identification task after a sequence of visually-guided reaches: a face perceived as neutral in a baseline condition appeared slightly happy after comfortable actions and slightly angry after uncomfortable actions. However, skeptics about the penetrability of perception (Zeimbekis & Raftopoulos, 2015) would consider such evidence insufficient to demonstrate that observer’s internal states induced by action comfort/discomfort affect perception in a top-down fashion. The action-modulated mood might have produced a back-end memory effect capable of affecting post-perceptual and decision processing, but not front-end perception. Here, we present evidence that performing a facial emotion detection (not identification) task after MAMIP exhibits systematic mood-congruent sensitivity changes, rather than response bias changes attributable to cognitive set shifts; i.e., we show that observer’s internal states induced by bodily action can modulate affective perception. The detection threshold for happiness was lower after fifty comfortable than uncomfortable reaches; while the detection threshold for anger was lower after fifty uncomfortable than comfortable reaches. Action valence induced an overall sensitivity improvement in detecting subtle variations of congruent facial expressions (happiness after positive comfortable actions, anger after negative uncomfortable actions), in the absence of significant response bias shifts. Notably, both comfortable and uncomfortable reaches impact sensitivity in an approximately symmetric way relative to a baseline inaction condition. All of these constitute compelling evidence of a genuine top-down effect on perception: specifically, facial expressions of emotion are penetrable by action-induced mood. Affective priming by action valence is a candidate mechanism for the influence of observer’s internal states on properties experienced as phenomenally objective and yet loaded with meaning.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Faster but less careful prehension in presence of high, rather than low, social status attendees

Carlo Fantoni; Sara Rigutti; Valentina Piccoli; Elena Sommacal; Andrea Carnaghi

Ample evidence attests that social intention, elicited through gestures explicitly signaling a request of communicative intention, affects the patterning of hand movement kinematics. The current study goes beyond the effect of social intention and addresses whether the same action of reaching to grasp an object for placing it in an end target position within or without a monitoring attendee’s peripersonal space, can be moulded by pure social factors in general, and by social facilitation in particular. A motion tracking system (Optotrak Certus) was used to record motor acts. We carefully avoided the usage of communicative intention by keeping constant both the visual information and the positional uncertainty of the end target position, while we systematically varied the social status of the attendee (a high, or a low social status) in separated blocks. Only thirty acts performed in the presence of a different social status attendee, revealed a significant change of kinematic parameterization of hand movement, independently of the attendees distance. The amplitude of peak velocity reached by the hand during the reach-to-grasp and the lift-to-place phase of the movement was larger in the high rather than in the low social status condition. By contrast, the deceleration time of the reach-to-grasp phase and the maximum grasp aperture was smaller in the high rather than in the low social status condition. These results indicated that the hand movement was faster but less carefully shaped in presence of a high, but not of a low social status attendee. This kinematic patterning suggests that being monitored by a high rather than a low social status attendee might lead participants to experience evaluation apprehension that informs the control of motor execution. Motor execution would rely more on feedforward motor control in the presence of a high social status human attendee, vs. feedback motor control, in the presence of a low social status attendee.


PeerJ | 2015

Web party effect: a cocktail party effect in the web environment

Sara Rigutti; Carlo Fantoni; Walter Gerbino

In goal-directed web navigation, labels compete for selection: this process often involves knowledge integration and requires selective attention to manage the dizziness of web layouts. Here we ask whether the competition for selection depends on all web navigation options or only on those options that are more likely to be useful for information seeking, and provide evidence in favor of the latter alternative. Participants in our experiment navigated a representative set of real websites of variable complexity, in order to reach an information goal located two clicks away from the starting home page. The time needed to reach the goal was accounted for by a novel measure of home page complexity based on a part of (not all) web options: the number of links embedded within web navigation elements weighted by the number and type of embedding elements. Our measure fully mediated the effect of several standard complexity metrics (the overall number of links, words, images, graphical regions, the JPEG file size of home page screenshots) on information seeking time and usability ratings. Furthermore, it predicted the cognitive demand of web navigation, as revealed by the duration judgment ratio (i.e., the ratio of subjective to objective duration of information search). Results demonstrate that focusing on relevant links while ignoring other web objects optimizes the deployment of attentional resources necessary to navigation. This is in line with a web party effect (i.e., a cocktail party effect in the web environment): users tune into web elements that are relevant for the achievement of their navigation goals and tune out all others.


Journal of e-learning and knowledge society | 2008

Lifelong learning and e-learning 2.0: the contribution of usability studies

Sara Rigutti; Gisella Paoletti; Anna Morandini

Usability assesses how easy and effi cient the use of ICT interfaces is, its measurement may show if and how much a tool allows its users to accomplish their tasks with profi t and without an excessive load, according to the designer’s goals and expectations. Therefore Usability tests with users can help in designing web interfaces, which are effi cient and easy to use. In the current development of web environments one sees the emergence of the RSS, blog, wiki, podcast technologies and the diffusion of web 2.0 interfaces. In this paper we pose the question of how to ascertain the role of Usability of new web 2.0 interfaces by testing a personal learning environment, LTEver, which allows document sharing and discussion within a community of learners. Results obtained with 10 novice users show that Usability problems within LTEver, related to web 2.0 interface, are similar to those commonly found within web interfaces, but do not affect the perception of utility and potentiality of these new tools and of new web 2.0 environments.


Archive | 2008

Presentation Manager And Web2.0: Understanding Online Presentations

Gisella Paoletti; Sara Rigutti; Anna Guglielmelli

The problem of the effectiveness of academic lessons and meeting presentations made available on the web through the usage of software and platforms like Slideshare and Moodle is fundamental for the development of new teaching technologies. We compared the recall and perceived cognitive effort in three groups of undergraduate students following the same lesson in different formats: audio, text, audio plus text. Students that acquired the contents of the lesson using both the auditory and the visual modalities substantially improved their recall performances relative to students that used either audio alone or text alone. Textual format complements (not hinders) auditory information by providing a frame of reference that can be utilized to identify basic contents. Double modality, allowing for the integration of information, is an extended presentation format.


international conference on cognitive modelling | 2004

Navigating Within a Web Site: the WebStep Model.

Sara Rigutti; Walter Gerbino


Journal of Vision | 2010

Layout following and visual search for web labels

Sara Rigutti; Walter Gerbino; Carlo Fantoni


Sistemi intelligenti | 2000

Usabilità dei siti: creatività e sregolatezza della rete

Walter Gerbino; Sara Rigutti


13th Alps Adria Psychology Conference | 2018

Never alone 2.0: The social dimension of the emotional semantic congruency effect

Giulio Baldassi; Sara Rigutti; Marta Stragà; Tiziano Agostini; Andrea Carnaghi; Drazen Domijan; Carlo Fantoni


Sistemi intelligenti | 2016

Ecousabilità dei siti web [Websites Eco-Usability]

Sara Rigutti; Walter Gerbino; Carlo Fantoni

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