这是在看你:眼神凝视和协同回忆。

Psychological Research Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Epub Date: 2021-06-07 DOI:10.1007/s00426-021-01533-2
Celia B Harris, Penny Van Bergen, Sophia A Harris, Nina McIlwain, Amael Arguel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在日常生活中,我们经常一起回忆。令人惊讶的是,研究可靠地显示了合作的成本。与人数相同的人分开记忆相比,分组记忆要少。然而,有证据表明,一些群体比其他群体更成功,这取决于群体关系和语言沟通策略等因素。为了进一步了解更成功和更不成功的合作群体的特征,我们研究了非语言注视行为是否与群体结果有关。我们使用眼动追踪眼镜来测量合作的二人组在合作回忆时互相看对方的时间,并研究了眼睛和面部注视的个体差异是否与合作表现有关。增加的眼睛和面部注视与更高的合作回忆表现、更明确的策略使用、更多的合作后利益和更多的记忆重叠有关。然而,它也与合作前的回忆有关,这表明合作期间的凝视可能至少部分地反映了先前的能力。这项研究有助于阐明协作回忆结果背后的个体差异,并表明非语言沟通区分了更成功和更不成功的合作群体。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Here's looking at you: eye gaze and collaborative recall.

In everyday life, we remember together often. Surprisingly, research reliably shows costs of collaboration. People remember less in groups than the same number of individuals remember separately. However, there is evidence that some groups are more successful than others, depending on factors such as group relationship and verbal communication strategies. To understand further the characteristics of more successful vs. less successful collaborative groups, we examined whether non-verbal eye gaze behaviour was associated with group outcomes. We used eye tracking glasses to measure how much collaborating dyads looked at each other during collaborative recall, and examined whether individual differences in eye- and face-directed gaze were associated with collaborative performance. Increased eye- and face-directed gaze was associated with higher collaborative recall performance, more explicit strategy use, more post-collaborative benefits, and increased memory overlap. However, it was also associated with pre-collaborative recall, indicating that gaze during collaboration may at least partially reflect pre-existing abilities. This research helps elucidate individual differences that underlie the outcomes of collaborative recall, and suggests that non-verbal communication differentiates more vs. less successful collaborative groups.

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