• Title of article

    Listeners invest in an assumed other’s perspective despite cognitive cost

  • Author/Authors

    Duran، نويسنده , , Nicholas D. and Dale، نويسنده , , Rick and Kreuz، نويسنده , , Roger J.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    19
  • From page
    22
  • To page
    40
  • Abstract
    We explored perspective-taking behavior in a visuospatial mental rotation task that requires listeners to adopt an egocentric or “other-centric” frame of reference. In the current task, objects could be interpreted relative to the point-of-view of the listener (egocentric) or of a simulated partner (other-centric). Across three studies, we evaluated participants’ willingness to consider and act on partner-specific information, showing that a partner’s perceived ability to contribute to collaborative mutual understanding modulated participants’ perspective-taking behavior, either by increasing other-centric (Study 2) or egocentric (Study 3) responding. Moreover, we show that a large proportion of participants resolved referential ambiguity in terms of their partner’s perspective, even when it was more cognitively difficult to do so (as tracked by online movement measures), and when the presence of a social partner had to be assumed (Studies 1 and 2). In addition, participants continued to consider their partner’s perspective during trials where visual perspectives were shared. Our results show that participants will thoroughly invest in either an other-centric or egocentric mode of responding, and that perspective-taking strategies are not always dictated by minimizing processing demands, but by more potent (albeit subtle) factors in the social context.
  • Keywords
    Visuospatial processing , mental rotation , Mousetracking , Perspective-taking , Audience design
  • Journal title
    Cognition
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Cognition
  • Record number

    2077205