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Take a Seat and Get Into Its Shoes! When Humans Spontaneously Represent Visual Scenes From the Point of View of Inanimate Objects

Authors :
Alexandre Foncelle
Eric Chabanat
Yves Rossetti
François Quesque
Sophie Jacquin-Courtois
Source :
Perception. 49:1333-1347
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2020.

Abstract

Human description of the surrounding world may spontaneously rely on others’ perspective, which is a crucial component of social cognition. In five studies, participants were asked to describe the spatial relations between objects in visual scenes including, or not, other agents. In Experiment 1, a substantial proportion of participants used an other-centered perspective in the presence of another agent, replicating classical findings. To our own surprise, we also observed that an even greater number of participants used an other-centered perspective when the human agent was replaced by an armchair. In order to explore this phenomenon, Experiments 2 to 5 compared the respective strength of chair-centered and agent-centered perspectives and/or set them into conflict. A significant proportion of participants spontaneously took the seat’s perspective even when it may not be sat on (Experiments 3 and 4) and even when the seat was not referred to (Experiments 4 and 5). Altogether, these findings suggest that perspective taking may spontaneously apply to inanimate objects. These results question whether such tendencies originate from social cognitive skills—as classically assumed—or reveal a nonsocial phenomenon. Future works should specifically test the widely assumed social nature of spontaneous perspective-taking.

Details

ISSN :
14684233 and 03010066
Volume :
49
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Perception
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a7aa69ff5d1c0c569685b163b741f3b3