| Literature DB >> 23049794 |
Eva Wiese1, Agnieszka Wykowska, Jan Zwickel, Hermann J Müller.
Abstract
The ability to understand and predict others' behavior is essential for successful interactions. When making predictions about what other humans will do, we treat them as intentional systems and adopt the intentional stance, i.e., refer to their mental states such as desires and intentions. In the present experiments, we investigated whether the mere belief that the observed agent is an intentional system influences basic social attention mechanisms. We presented pictures of a human and a robot face in a gaze cuing paradigm and manipulated the likelihood of adopting the intentional stance by instruction: in some conditions, participants were told that they were observing a human or a robot, in others, that they were observing a human-like mannequin or a robot whose eyes were controlled by a human. In conditions in which participants were made to believe they were observing human behavior (intentional stance likely) gaze cuing effects were significantly larger as compared to conditions when adopting the intentional stance was less likely. This effect was independent of whether a human or a robot face was presented. Therefore, we conclude that adopting the intentional stance when observing others' behavior fundamentally influences basic mechanisms of social attention. The present results provide striking evidence that high-level cognitive processes, such as beliefs, modulate bottom-up mechanisms of attentional selection in a top-down manner.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23049794 PMCID: PMC3458834 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0045391
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Stimuli and trial sequence.
Pictures for the Robot and Human Gazer are shown in (A). The sequence of events within a trial is shown in (B). The human face (F 07) is taken from the Karolinska Directed Emotional Faces (KDEF) database [24]. We have received written informed consent (as outlined in the PLoS consent form) from Karolinska Institute (Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Section Psychology) to use the photograph for experimental investigations and illustration of the stimuli in publications. The picture of the robot face is made by LSR (TU Munich) and depicts the research robot EDDIE (made by LSR, TU Munich).
Mean RTs and SEM (in ms) as a function of cue validity and instruction, for human and robot cues.
| Human | Robot | Statistics | |||||
| Valid | Invalid | Neutral | Valid | Invalid | Neutral | Cue type×Validity | |
| Instruction 1 | 447 (10) | 461 (11) | 479 (10) | 451 (11) | 456 (12) | 481 (11) |
|
| Instruction 2 | 454 (12) | 469 (13) | 482 (12) | 453 (12) | 467 (12) | 484 (12) |
|
| Instruction 3 | 451 (11) | 455 (12) | 474 (12) | 450 (11) | 454 (11) | 477 (13) |
|
Figure 2Size of gaze cuing effects as function of Cue Type and Instruction.
Error bars represent standard errors of the mean adjusted to within-subject designs (see [40]). *p<.05, **p<.01.