Deconstructing eye contact perception: Measuring perceptual precision and self-referential tendency using an online psychophysical eye contact detection task

Eye contact perception-the ability to accurately and efficiently discriminate others' gaze directions-is critical to understanding others and functioning in a complex social world. Previous research shows that it is affected in multiple neuropsychiatric disorders accompanied by social dysfuncti...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2020-03, Vol.15 (3), p.e0230258-e0230258
Hauptverfasser: Lasagna, Carly A, McLaughlin, Merranda M, Deng, Wisteria Y, Whiting, Erica L, Tso, Ivy F
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description Eye contact perception-the ability to accurately and efficiently discriminate others' gaze directions-is critical to understanding others and functioning in a complex social world. Previous research shows that it is affected in multiple neuropsychiatric disorders accompanied by social dysfunction, and understanding the cognitive processes giving rise to eye contact perception would help advance mechanistic investigations of psychopathology. This study aims to validate an online, psychophysical eye contact detection task through which two constituent cognitive components of eye contact perception (perceptual precision and self-referential tendency) can be derived. Data collected from a large online sample showed excellent test-retest reliability for self-referential tendency and moderate reliability for perceptual precision. Convergence validity was supported by correlations with social cognitive measures tapping into different aspects of understanding others. Hierarchical regression analyses revealed that perceptual precision and self-referential tendency explained unique variance in social cognition, suggesting that they measure unique aspects of related constructs. Overall, this study provided support for the reliability and validity of the eye contact perception metrics derived using the online Eye Contact Detection Task. The value of the task for future psychopathology research was discussed.
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subjects Analysis
Anxiety
Autism
Bias
Biology and Life Sciences
Cognition
Cognition & reasoning
Cognitive ability
Correlation analysis
Eye contact
Internet
Measurement
Medicine and Health Sciences
Mental disorders
Nervous system diseases
Perception
Psychiatry
Psychopathology
Psychophysics
Quantitative psychology
Regression analysis
Reliability
Researchers
Schizophrenia
Sensory perception
Social interactions
Social Sciences
Studies
title Deconstructing eye contact perception: Measuring perceptual precision and self-referential tendency using an online psychophysical eye contact detection task
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