"Are you looking at me?": Behavioural and electrophysiological measures of gaze-following across childhood.

Lead Research Organisation: Birkbeck, University of London
Department Name: Psychological Sciences

Abstract

The interpretation of a conspecific's direction of gaze is of fundamental importance to humans and non-humans. Eye-gaze direction is a direct cue of immediate intentions, but also provides a clue as to what adults are referring to when uttering words that the child is not already familiar with. In human adults, there is a bias to assume that ambiguous gaze is directed at one's own self. How this behaviour develops, what its neural underpinnings are, and the impact 2D vs. 3D visual cues on performance remain unclear. This will be investigated using psychophysics, computational modeling, EMG and eye-tracking methods.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
BB/M009513/1 01/10/2015 31/03/2024
1754405 Studentship BB/M009513/1 01/10/2016 31/12/2020 Sam Blakeman
 
Description Computer algorithms can benefit from multiple learning systems that share parallels with different brain structures.
Exploitation Route This work could be used to inform new algorithms or applied in industry in a variety of ways.
Sectors Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software)