Department of Psychology, University of Alberta.
Neuroscience and Mental Health Institute, University of Alberta.
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform. 2023 Oct;49(10):1330-1344. doi: 10.1037/xhp0001150. Epub 2023 Aug 10.
We investigate an ecologically pertinent form of social uncertainty regarding the ability to read another's intentions. We use classic measures (response time, accuracy) and dynamic measures (mouse trajectories) to investigate how people generate or minimize uncertainty regarding their own intentions under different social contexts, and how uncertainty regarding other's intentions affects decision making. Ninety-six participants ( = 48 dyads) completed a two-player online card game, where the goal was to collect cards with a certain feature (e.g., triangles), with participant cursor movements projected to both players. Participants played six games, three cooperatively and three competitively (Social Decision Context). Points were awarded for two decisions: collecting a card matching one's goal (ability to achieve personal goal) and correctly guessing the other player's goal (ability to guess intention). Data revealed: (a) Card scores did not vary with Social Decision Context, (b) Guess scores did vary with Social Decision Context, with more correct guesses when cooperating compared to competing, and (c) Mouse trajectories (durations and mouse distance traveled) decreased when cooperating compared to competing. These results indicate that better guessing during cooperative play is not due to explicit communication (i.e., circling desired cards), but may be due to increased speed and confidence when making decisions in a cooperative context. Additionally, participants could be actively hiding their intention in a competitive context. Thus, social uncertainty when reading another's intentions is both adaptive-affected by the prescribed social context, and automatic-indirectly inferred from the way another moves their mouse when acting with intention. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
我们研究了一种与阅读他人意图能力相关的具有生态意义的社会不确定性形式。我们使用经典的测量方法(反应时间、准确性)和动态的测量方法(鼠标轨迹)来研究人们在不同的社会背景下如何产生或最小化对自己意图的不确定性,以及对他人意图的不确定性如何影响决策。96 名参与者(=48 对)完成了一个两人在线纸牌游戏,目标是收集具有特定特征的卡片(例如,三角形),参与者的光标移动会被投射到两个玩家。参与者玩了六轮游戏,三轮合作,三轮竞争(社会决策背景)。有两个决策可以得分:收集一张与自己目标匹配的卡片(实现个人目标的能力)和正确猜测另一名玩家的目标(猜测意图的能力)。数据显示:(a)卡片得分不受社会决策背景的影响;(b)猜测得分随社会决策背景而变化,合作时的正确猜测比竞争时多;(c)与竞争相比,合作时鼠标轨迹(持续时间和鼠标移动距离)缩短。这些结果表明,合作时更好的猜测并不是因为明确的沟通(即,圈出想要的卡片),而是因为在合作情境下做出决策时速度更快,信心更强。此外,参与者可能在竞争环境中积极隐藏自己的意图。因此,当阅读他人的意图时,社会不确定性既是适应性的(受规定的社会背景影响),也是自动的(从另一个人在有意行动时移动鼠标的方式间接推断)。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。