The Perception of Cooperativeness Without Any Visual or Auditory Communication

Perceiving social information such as the cooperativeness of another person is an important part of human interaction. But can people perceive the cooperativeness of others even without any visual or auditory information? In a novel experimental setup, we connected two people with a rope and made th...

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Main Authors: Dong-Seon Chang, Franziska Burger, Heinrich H Bülthoff, Stephan de la Rosa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2015-12-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669515619508
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spelling doaj-5d1f1a9a690b456987f41884f22e9bed2020-11-25T01:20:36ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952015-12-01610.1177/204166951561950810.1177_2041669515619508The Perception of Cooperativeness Without Any Visual or Auditory CommunicationDong-Seon ChangFranziska BurgerHeinrich H BülthoffStephan de la RosaPerceiving social information such as the cooperativeness of another person is an important part of human interaction. But can people perceive the cooperativeness of others even without any visual or auditory information? In a novel experimental setup, we connected two people with a rope and made them accomplish a point-collecting task together while they could not see or hear each other. We observed a consistently emerging turn-taking behavior in the interactions and installed a confederate in a subsequent experiment who either minimized or maximized this behavior. Participants experienced this only through the haptic force-feedback of the rope and made evaluations about the confederate after each interaction. We found that perception of cooperativeness was significantly affected only by the manipulation of this turn-taking behavior. Gender- and size-related judgments also significantly differed. Our results suggest that people can perceive social information such as the cooperativeness of other people even in situations where possibilities for communication are minimal.https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669515619508
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dong-Seon Chang
Franziska Burger
Heinrich H Bülthoff
Stephan de la Rosa
spellingShingle Dong-Seon Chang
Franziska Burger
Heinrich H Bülthoff
Stephan de la Rosa
The Perception of Cooperativeness Without Any Visual or Auditory Communication
i-Perception
author_facet Dong-Seon Chang
Franziska Burger
Heinrich H Bülthoff
Stephan de la Rosa
author_sort Dong-Seon Chang
title The Perception of Cooperativeness Without Any Visual or Auditory Communication
title_short The Perception of Cooperativeness Without Any Visual or Auditory Communication
title_full The Perception of Cooperativeness Without Any Visual or Auditory Communication
title_fullStr The Perception of Cooperativeness Without Any Visual or Auditory Communication
title_full_unstemmed The Perception of Cooperativeness Without Any Visual or Auditory Communication
title_sort perception of cooperativeness without any visual or auditory communication
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Perceiving social information such as the cooperativeness of another person is an important part of human interaction. But can people perceive the cooperativeness of others even without any visual or auditory information? In a novel experimental setup, we connected two people with a rope and made them accomplish a point-collecting task together while they could not see or hear each other. We observed a consistently emerging turn-taking behavior in the interactions and installed a confederate in a subsequent experiment who either minimized or maximized this behavior. Participants experienced this only through the haptic force-feedback of the rope and made evaluations about the confederate after each interaction. We found that perception of cooperativeness was significantly affected only by the manipulation of this turn-taking behavior. Gender- and size-related judgments also significantly differed. Our results suggest that people can perceive social information such as the cooperativeness of other people even in situations where possibilities for communication are minimal.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669515619508
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