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Altercentric intrusions from multiple perspectives: beyond dyads.

Francesca Capozzi1, Andrea Cavallo1, Tiziano Furlanetto1

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Observers automatically process others' visual perspectives, even when irrelevant. This spontaneous perspective-taking is reduced when multiple individuals hold differing viewpoints, suggesting limits to tracking multiple perspectives simultaneously.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Social Cognition
  • Neuroscience

Background:

  • Observers rapidly and involuntarily process others' visual perspectives in dyadic interactions.
  • It remains unclear if this spontaneous perspective-taking extends to non-dyadic contexts.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether spontaneous perspective-taking occurs beyond two-person (dyadic) interactions.
  • To examine how the number and orientation of other agents influence spontaneous perspective-taking.

Main Methods:

  • A novel visual perspective task was designed, requiring participants to distinguish their own perspective from one or two avatars' perspectives.
  • Participants judged their own perspective or an avatar's perspective on objects.
  • Avatars either looked at the same objects or different objects.

Main Results:

  • Participants processed irrelevant perspectives even when they interfered with judgments about the relevant perspective, observed with one avatar.
  • Similar interference occurred when two avatars viewed the same objects, but was significantly reduced when avatars viewed different objects.
  • This indicates that the number and orientation of agents modulate spontaneous perspective-taking.

Conclusions:

  • Spontaneous perspective-taking is modulated by the number and differing viewpoints of other agents in non-dyadic settings.
  • While individuals efficiently compute one perspective, tracking multiple discrepant viewpoints may not occur spontaneously.
  • Findings contribute to the understanding of automaticity in perspective calculation.