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Journal ArticleDOI

How monkeys see the eyes: Cotton-top tamarins' reaction to changes in visual attention and action.

Laurie R. Santos, +1 more
- 26 Oct 1999 - 
- Vol. 2, Iss: 3, pp 131-139
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TLDR
This paper used an expectancy violation procedure to determine whether cotton-top tamarins use the direction of another individual's gaze to predict future actions, and found that when the actor oriented with both her head and eyes, subjects looked significantly longer at the second test event in which the actor reached for the object to which she had not previously oriented.
Abstract
Among social species, the capacity to detect where another individual is looking is adaptive because gaze direction often predicts what an individual is attending to, and thus what its future actions are likely to be. We used an expectancy violation procedure to determine whether cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus oedipus) use the direction of another individual’s gaze to predict future actions. Subjects were familiarized with a sequence in which a human actor turned her attention toward one of two objects sitting on a table and then reached for that object. Following familiarization, subjects saw two test events. In one test event, the actor gazed at the new object and then reached for that object. From a human perspective, this event is considered consistent with the causal relationship between visual attention and subsequent action, that is, grabbing the object attended to. In the second test event, the actor gazed at the old object, but reached for the new object. This event is considered a violation of expectation. When the actor oriented with both her head-and-eyes, subjects looked significantly longer at the second test event in which the actor reached for the object to which she had not previously oriented. However, there was no difference in looking time between test events when the actor used only her eyes to orient. These findings suggest that tamarins are able to use some combination of head orientation and gaze direction, but not gaze direction alone, to predict the actions of a human agent.

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Citations
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The eyes have it: the neuroethology, function and evolution of social gaze

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Gaze cueing of attention: visual attention, social cognition, and individual differences.

TL;DR: This review aims to provide a comprehensive overview of past and current research into the perception of gaze behavior and its effect on the observer, including gaze-cueing paradigm that has been used to investigate the mechanisms of joint attention.
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The Domestication of Social Cognition in Dogs

TL;DR: It is found that wolves who were raised by humans do not show these same skills, whereas domestic dog puppies only a few weeks old, even those that have had little human contact, do show these skills.
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Segmentation of the speech stream in a non-human primate: statistical learning in cotton-top tamarins.

TL;DR: The results suggest that both humans and non-human primates possess mechanisms capable of computing these particular aspects of serial order, and that future work must now show where humans' and infants' and other species' abilities in these tasks diverge.
References
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Book

Mindblindness : An Essay on Autism and Theory of Mind

TL;DR: The four steps autism and mindblindness how brains read minds the language of the eyes mindreading - back to the future was discussed in evolutionary psychology and social chess mindreading as discussed by the authors.
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The Evolution of Communication

TL;DR: The argument focuses on the design of natural communication systems language evolution and the concept of similarity, similarity and classification, units of analysis and their classification in communication potential fruits of Tinbergen's research design.
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Visual cells in the temporal cortex sensitive to face view and gaze direction

TL;DR: Results suggest that the recognition of one type of object may proceed via the independent high level analysis of several restricted views of the object (viewer-centred descriptions).
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