A cognitive ethology study of first- and third-person perspectives.

The aim of the present study was to test the cognitive ethology approach, which seeks to link cognitions and behaviours as they operate in everyday life with those studied in controlled lab-based investigations. Our test bed was the understanding of first-person and third-person perspectives, which...

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Main Authors: Joseph D Chisholm, Craig S Chapman, Marvin Amm, Walter F Bischof, Dan Smilek, Alan Kingstone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3966828?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-db5d9a64e58c4ec4b2a09198cfaca9072020-11-24T21:32:38ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0193e9269610.1371/journal.pone.0092696A cognitive ethology study of first- and third-person perspectives.Joseph D ChisholmCraig S ChapmanMarvin AmmWalter F BischofDan SmilekAlan KingstoneThe aim of the present study was to test the cognitive ethology approach, which seeks to link cognitions and behaviours as they operate in everyday life with those studied in controlled lab-based investigations. Our test bed was the understanding of first-person and third-person perspectives, which in lab-based investigations have been defined in a diverse and multi-faceted manner. We hypothesized that because these lab-based investigations seek to connect with how first- and third-person perspective operates in everyday life, then either some of the divergent lab-based definitions are missing their mark or the everyday conceptualization of first- and third-person perspective is multi-faceted. Our investigation revealed the latter. By applying a cognitive ethology approach we were able to determine that a) peoples' everyday understanding of perspective is diverse yet reliable, and b) a lab-based investigation that applies these diverse understandings in a controlled setting can accurately predict how people will perform. These findings provide a 'proof of concept' for the cognitive ethology approach. Moreover, the present data demonstrate that previous lab-based studies, that often had very different understandings of first- and third-person perspective, were each in and of themselves valid. That is, each is capturing part of a broader understanding of perspective in everyday life. Our results also revealed a novel social factor not included in traditional conceptualizations of first-person third-perspective, that of eye gaze, i.e., eye contact is equated strongly with first-person perspective and the lack of eye-contact with third-person perspective.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3966828?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joseph D Chisholm
Craig S Chapman
Marvin Amm
Walter F Bischof
Dan Smilek
Alan Kingstone
spellingShingle Joseph D Chisholm
Craig S Chapman
Marvin Amm
Walter F Bischof
Dan Smilek
Alan Kingstone
A cognitive ethology study of first- and third-person perspectives.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Joseph D Chisholm
Craig S Chapman
Marvin Amm
Walter F Bischof
Dan Smilek
Alan Kingstone
author_sort Joseph D Chisholm
title A cognitive ethology study of first- and third-person perspectives.
title_short A cognitive ethology study of first- and third-person perspectives.
title_full A cognitive ethology study of first- and third-person perspectives.
title_fullStr A cognitive ethology study of first- and third-person perspectives.
title_full_unstemmed A cognitive ethology study of first- and third-person perspectives.
title_sort cognitive ethology study of first- and third-person perspectives.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description The aim of the present study was to test the cognitive ethology approach, which seeks to link cognitions and behaviours as they operate in everyday life with those studied in controlled lab-based investigations. Our test bed was the understanding of first-person and third-person perspectives, which in lab-based investigations have been defined in a diverse and multi-faceted manner. We hypothesized that because these lab-based investigations seek to connect with how first- and third-person perspective operates in everyday life, then either some of the divergent lab-based definitions are missing their mark or the everyday conceptualization of first- and third-person perspective is multi-faceted. Our investigation revealed the latter. By applying a cognitive ethology approach we were able to determine that a) peoples' everyday understanding of perspective is diverse yet reliable, and b) a lab-based investigation that applies these diverse understandings in a controlled setting can accurately predict how people will perform. These findings provide a 'proof of concept' for the cognitive ethology approach. Moreover, the present data demonstrate that previous lab-based studies, that often had very different understandings of first- and third-person perspective, were each in and of themselves valid. That is, each is capturing part of a broader understanding of perspective in everyday life. Our results also revealed a novel social factor not included in traditional conceptualizations of first-person third-perspective, that of eye gaze, i.e., eye contact is equated strongly with first-person perspective and the lack of eye-contact with third-person perspective.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3966828?pdf=render
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