Literature DB >> 22928627

Kinematics matters: a new eye-tracking investigation of animated triangles.

Paul Roux1, Christine Passerieux, Franck Ramus.   

Abstract

Eye movements have been recently recorded in participants watching animated triangles in short movies that normally evoke mentalizing (Frith-Happé animations). Authors have found systematic differences in oculomotor behaviour according to the degree of mental state attribution to these triangles: Participants made longer fixations and looked longer at intentional triangles than at triangles moving randomly. However, no study has yet explored kinematic characteristics of Frith-Happé animations and their influence on eye movements. In a first experiment, we have run a quantitative kinematic analysis of Frith-Happé animations and found that the time triangles spent moving and the distance between them decreased with the mentalistic complexity of their movements. In a second experiment, we have recorded eye movements in 17 participants watching Frith-Happé animations and found that some differences in fixation durations and in the proportion of gaze allocated to triangles between the different kinds of animations were entirely explained by low-level kinematic confounds. We finally present a new eye-tracking measure of visual attention, triangle pursuit duration, which does differentiate the different types of animations even after taking into account kinematic cofounds. However, some idiosyncratic kinematic properties of the Frith-Happé animations prevent an entirely satisfactory interpretation of these results. The different eye-tracking measures are interpreted as implicit and line measures of the processing of animate movements.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22928627     DOI: 10.1080/17470218.2012.704052

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)        ISSN: 1747-0218            Impact factor:   2.143


  6 in total

1.  Specificity, reliability and sensitivity of social brain responses during spontaneous mentalizing.

Authors:  Carolin Moessnang; Axel Schäfer; Edda Bilek; Paul Roux; Kristina Otto; Sarah Baumeister; Sarah Hohmann; Luise Poustka; Daniel Brandeis; Tobias Banaschewski; Andreas Meyer-Lindenberg; Heike Tost
Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2016-07-21       Impact factor: 3.436

2.  Interobject spacing explains the attentional bias toward interacting objects.

Authors:  Hauke S Meyerhoff; Stephan Schwan; Markus Huff
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2014-04

3.  Pursuit tracks chase: exploring the role of eye movements in the detection of chasing.

Authors:  Matúš Šimkovic; Birgit Träuble
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2015-09-15       Impact factor: 2.984

4.  Preserved implicit mentalizing in schizophrenia despite poor explicit performance: evidence from eye tracking.

Authors:  Paul Roux; Pauline Smith; Christine Passerieux; Franck Ramus
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-10-05       Impact factor: 4.379

5.  Intact animacy perception during chase detection in ASD.

Authors:  Steven Vanmarcke; Sander van de Cruys; Pieter Moors; Johan Wagemans
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-09-19       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Kinematics and observer-animator kinematic similarity predict mental state attribution from Heider-Simmel style animations.

Authors:  Bianca A Schuster; Dagmar S Fraser; Jasper J F van den Bosch; Sophie Sowden; Andrew S Gordon; Dongsung Huh; Jennifer L Cook
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-09-14       Impact factor: 4.379

  6 in total

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