| Literature DB >> 27493767 |
Nicola Binetti1, Charlotte Harrison1, Antoine Coutrot2, Alan Johnston3, Isabelle Mareschal4.
Abstract
Most animals look at each other to signal threat or interest. In humans, this social interaction is usually punctuated with brief periods of mutual eye contact. Deviations from this pattern of gazing behaviour generally make us feel uncomfortable and are a defining characteristic of clinical conditions such as autism or schizophrenia, yet it is unclear what constitutes normal eye contact. Here, we measured, across a wide range of ages, cultures and personality types, the period of direct gaze that feels comfortable and examined whether autonomic factors linked to arousal were indicative of people's preferred amount of eye contact. Surprisingly, we find that preferred period of gaze duration is not dependent on fundamental characteristics such as gender, personality traits or attractiveness. However, we do find that subtle pupillary changes, indicative of physiological arousal, correlate with the amount of eye contact people find comfortable. Specifically, people preferring longer durations of eye contact display faster increases in pupil size when viewing another person than those preferring shorter durations. These results reveal that a person's preferred duration of eye contact is signalled by physiological indices (pupil dilation) beyond volitional control that may play a modulatory role in gaze behaviour.Entities:
Keywords: arousal; eye contact; eye-tracking; gaze duration; pupillometry
Year: 2016 PMID: 27493767 PMCID: PMC4968459 DOI: 10.1098/rsos.160086
Source DB: PubMed Journal: R Soc Open Sci ISSN: 2054-5703 Impact factor: 2.963
Figure 1.(a) Gaze task participant/actor experiment set-up and trial breakdown. Video clips of an actor (randomly selected from a pool of four female and four male actors; one actor per participant) are presented throughout 40 trials. On each clip, the actor directly gazes at the participant for a variable amount of time (between 100 and 10 300 ms, in 300 ms increments, preceded and followed by a 500 ms averted gaze directed at the bottom of the screen). Participants indicate at the end of the clip whether the actor's direct gaze was ‘too short’ or ‘too long’ with respect to what feels comfortable. (b) Psychometric fit and preferred gaze duration (PGD) of one participant's proportion of ‘too long’ responses as a function of the actor's direct gaze duration (top right panel) and distribution of PGDs in whole participant population.
Figure 2.Pupil signal differences between participants favouring direct gaze durations above (longer than) or below (shorter than) the population's mean PGD (L-PGD and S-PGD groups, respectively). (a) Participants were sampled at six progressively larger distances from population's mean PGD (six progressively smaller SA—SA 1–6; see figure insets in bottom right corners). Averaged pupil signals for L-PGD and S-PGD groups across each sampling area. Note that error bars (s.e.) progressively increase as the number of participants decreases for greater trial durations. PCA was run on the pupil signal within a 500 ms temporal region of interest (t-ROI; see electronic supplementary material). (b) First three components of the PCA run on the first 500 ms of the L-PGD and S-PGD averaged signals. (c) PCA mean first component scores between L-PGD and S-PGD groups. Significance thresholds: **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001. (d) Pupil signal during a 200 ms window prior to stimulus onset in L-PGD and S-PGD groups, revealing an anticipatory dissociation in pupil responses between groups.
Figure 3.Mean PCA first component score differences between L-PGD and S-PGD groups across the six sampling areas (SA), within a 200 ms anticipatory window preceding the actor face onset (a) and within the early 500 ms t-ROI window following the actor face onset (b). Mean first component score/PGD correlations related to the pupil signal in the anticipatory (c) and early t-ROI windows (d).