Social attention in the wild - fixations to the eyes and autistic traits during a naturalistic interaction in a healthy sample.

Sci Rep

Department of Clinical and Health Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna, Liebiggasse 5, 1010, Vienna, Austria.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Attention to social stimuli is crucial for developing social skills, but most studies have used static images or videos that don’t fully reflect real-life interactions.
  • This research utilized mobile eye-tracking during face-to-face interviews to analyze gaze behavior in 62 participants and found that those with higher autistic traits tended to gaze less frequently at the eye area.
  • The study also examined the impact of different types of interview questions on gaze patterns and discussed potential future directions and limitations of their experimental setup.

Article Abstract

Attention to social stimuli is a key component of social behavior and facilitates the development of fundamental social skills. Studies investigating social attention in neurotypical or neurodiverse populations have often relied on screen-based experiments using static images or videos, which lack the sensory richness and reciprocity present in real-life social interactions. This can possibly be attributed to the challenges one encounters when creating naturalistic experiments, such as dealing with dynamically moving areas of interest (AOIs), which require either time-intensive manual coding or restraining of participants. Here, we present findings from an experimental paradigm using unrestrained mobile eye-tracking and a face detection algorithm (MTCNN) to measure fixation rates during a semi-structured, face-to-face interview. Data from N = 62 healthy adult participants was analyzed for gaze behavior and related to participants' autistic traits. We observed a significant negative correlation between fixation rates on the eye region averaged over the entire interaction and scores on the autism spectrum quotient (AQ) (r = -0.14), indicating participants with high autistic traits fixated less frequently on the eye region. We also compared different types of interview questions (open vs. closed) to explore whether the reduction in fixation rates was more pronounced for specific time intervals during the interview. Lastly, we discuss both possibilities for extensions as well as limitations of the presented paradigm that could serve as inspiration for future research.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11615244PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-79210-8DOI Listing

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