Following gaze: gaze-following behavior as a window into social cognition
- PMID: 20428494
- PMCID: PMC2859805
- DOI: 10.3389/fnint.2010.00005
Following gaze: gaze-following behavior as a window into social cognition
Abstract
In general, individuals look where they attend and next intend to act. Many animals, including our own species, use observed gaze as a deictic ("pointing") cue to guide behavior. Among humans, these responses are reflexive and pervasive: they arise within a fraction of a second, act independently of task relevance, and appear to undergird our initial development of language and theory of mind. Human and nonhuman animals appear to share basic gaze-following behaviors, suggesting the foundations of human social cognition may also be present in nonhuman brains.
Keywords: attention; joint attention; orienting; shared attention; social attention; theory of mind.
Figures
References
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
