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Regular articles

Eye tracking reveals the cost of switching between self and other perspectives in a visual perspective-taking task

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Pages 1646-1660 | Received 06 Jan 2016, Accepted 27 May 2016, Published online: 30 Jun 2016
 

ABSTRACT

Previous studies have shown that while people can rapidly and accurately compute their own and other people’s visual perspectives, they experience difficulty ignoring the irrelevant perspective when the two perspectives differ. We used the “avatar” perspective-taking task to examine the mechanisms that underlie these egocentric (i.e., interference from their own perspective) and altercentric (i.e., interference from the other person’s perspective) tendencies. Participants were eye-tracked as they verified the number of discs in a visual scene according to either their own or an on-screen avatar’s perspective. Crucially in some trials the two perspectives were inconsistent (i.e., each saw a different number of discs), while in others they were consistent. To examine the effect of perspective switching, performance was compared for trials that were preceded with the same versus a different perspective cue. We found that altercentric interference can be reduced or eliminated when participants stick with their own perspective across consecutive trials. Our eye-tracking analyses revealed distinct fixation patterns for self and other perspective taking, suggesting that consistency effects in this paradigm are driven by implicit mentalizing of what others can see, and not automatic directional cues from the avatar.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

ORCiD

Heather J. Ferguson http://orcid.org/0000-0002-1575-4820

Notes

1. Participants’ starting fixation (i.e., at the point of image onset) was discarded since this was always on the avatar in the centre of the screen (due to the centrally located number on the preceding screen).

Additional information

Funding

This work was carried out with the support of a grant to H.F. and I.A. from the Leverhulme Trust [grant number RPG-063].

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