AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on how adolescents detect social interactions in real-time using a virtual task.
  • Participants, aged 12 to 19, showed improved accuracy in recognizing each other through tactile feedback over six rounds of the experiment.
  • The findings indicate that the six-round version of the task is effective for studying social behavior in adolescents, similar to earlier research conducted on adults.

Article Abstract

The study of real-time social interaction provides ecologically valid insight into social behavior. The objective of the current research is to experimentally assess real-time social contingency detection in an adolescent population, using a shortened version of the Perceptual Crossing Experiment (PCE). Pairs of 148 adolescents aged between 12 and 19 were instructed to find each other in a virtual environment interspersed with other objects by interacting with each other using tactile feedback only. Across six rounds, participants demonstrated increasing accuracy in social contingency detection, which was associated with increasing subjective experience of the mutual interaction. Subjective experience was highest in rounds when both participants were simultaneously accurate in detecting each other's presence. The six-round version yielded comparable social contingency detection outcome measures to a ten-round version of the task. The shortened six-round version of the PCE has therefore enabled us to extend the previous findings on social contingency detection in adults to an adolescent population, enabling implementation in prospective research designs to assess the development of social contingency detection over time.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13428-020-01378-4DOI Listing

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