4.2 Article

Is chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) by the spatial attention reflexively triggered gaze cue?

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 121, Issue 2, Pages 156-170

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/0735-7036.121.2.156

Keywords

attention; chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes); cueing paradigm; gaze; social cognition

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Humans show a reflexive shift in spatial attention triggered by gaze cues. Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) have an excellent ability to follow another's gaze, but they exhibit a limited capacity to engage in triadic interactions based on joint attention, suggesting the possibility of contributions of the different mechanisms underlying joint attention between humans and chimpanzees. The present study thus examined how the chimpanzee's visual spatial attention is triggered by gaze cues. Two chimpanzees showed no clear signs of attention shift triggered by various kinds of nonfacial and facial stimuli with averted gaze under the letter-discrimination tasks but showed significant cueing effects when the head-turning cue was presented in a quasi-dynamic manner. These cueing effects were, however, affected by the predictability of the gaze cue: Highly predictive gaze cues caused stronger cueing effects than less predictive cues. Thus, these results suggest that the shift in spatial attention caused by gaze cues does occur in chimpanzees, but, in contrast to humans, vulnerability against the cue predictability suggests that the voluntary mechanism contributes more dominantly than the reflexive mechanism to this attention shift.

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