Gaze following in multiagent contexts: Evidence for a quorum-like principle

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Abstract

Research shows that humans spontaneously follow another individual’s gaze. However, little remains known on how they respond when multiple gaze cues diverge across members of a social group. To address this question, we presented participants with displays depicting three (Experiment 1) or five (Experiment 2) agents showing diverging social cues. In a three-person group, one individual looking at the target (33% of the group) was sufficient to elicit gaze-facilitated target responses. With a five-person group, however, three individuals looking at the target (60% of the group) were necessary to produce the same effect. Gaze following in small groups therefore appears to be based on a quorum-like principle, whereby the critical level of social information needed for gaze following is determined by a proportion of consistent social cues scaled as a function of group size. As group size grows, greater agreement is needed to evoke joint attention.

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Capozzi, F., Bayliss, A. P., & Ristic, J. (2018). Gaze following in multiagent contexts: Evidence for a quorum-like principle. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 25(6), 2260–2266. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-018-1464-3

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