Seeing it their way: Evidence for rapid and involuntary computation of what other people see.
University of Nottingham · University of Alabama at Birmingham
Abstract
In a series of three visual perspective-taking experiments, we asked adult participants to judge their own or someone else's visual perspective in situations where both perspectives were either the same or different. We found that participants could not easily ignore what someone else saw when making self-perspective judgments. This was observed even when participants were only required to take their own perspective within the same block of trials (Experiment 2) or even within the entire experiment (Experiment 3), i.e. under conditions which gave participants a clear opportunity to adopt a strategy of ignoring the other person's irrelevant perspective. Under some circumstances, participants were also more…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 26.59
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 32
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Perspective (graphical)
- Psychology
- Perspective-taking
- Social psychology
- Cognitive psychology
- Computer science
- Artificial intelligence