4.5 Article

TANGO: A reliable, open-source, browser-based task to assess individual differences in gaze understanding in 3 to 5-year-old children and adults

Journal

BEHAVIOR RESEARCH METHODS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13428-023-02159-5

Keywords

Social cognition; Individual differences; Gaze cues; Cognitive development

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Traditional measures of social cognition often lack satisfactory psychometric properties and fail to capture individual differences. This study introduces TANGO, a reliable and open-source task that quantifies individual differences in gaze understanding. The task, which can be used in person or remotely, measures click imprecision and adapts easily to different study requirements. Results from a child and adult sample show significant developmental gains and demonstrate the task's validity. This work offers a promising approach to studying individual differences in social cognition and understanding the structure and development of core social-cognitive processes.
Traditional measures of social cognition used in developmental research often lack satisfactory psychometric properties and are not designed to capture variation between individuals. Here, we present the TANGO (Task for Assessing iNdividual differences in Gaze understanding-Open); a brief (approx. 5-10min), reliable, open-source task to quantify individual differences in the understanding of gaze cues. Localizing the attentional focus of an agent is crucial in inferring their mental states, building common ground, and thus, supporting cooperation. Our interactive browser-based task works across devices and enables in-person and remote testing. The implemented spatial layout allows for discrete and continuous measures of participants' click imprecision and is easily adaptable to different study requirements. Our task measures inter-individual differences in a child (N = 387) and an adult (N = 236) sample. Our two study versions and data collection modes yield comparable results that show substantial developmental gains: the older children are, the more accurately they locate the target. High internal consistency and test-retest reliability estimates underline that the captured variation is systematic. Associations with social-environmental factors and language skills speak to the validity of the task. This work shows a promising way forward in studying individual differences in social cognition and will help us explore the structure and development of our core social-cognitive processes in greater detail.

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