THEORY OF MIND – ΘΕΩΡΙΑ ΤΟΥ ΝΟΥ

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RESEARCH ARTICLE

What Eye Movements Can Tell about Theory of Mind in a Strategic Game

Ben Meijering1*, Hedderik van Rijn2, Niels A. Taatgen1,Rineke Verbrugge1

1 Department of Artificial Intelligence, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands, 2 Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands

Citation: Meijering B, van Rijn H, Taatgen NA, Verbrugge R (2012) What Eye Movements Can Tell about Theory of Mind in a Strategic Game. PLoS ONE 7(9): e45961. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0045961

Abstract

This study investigates strategies in reasoning about mental states of others, a process that requires theory of mind. It is a first step in studying the cognitive basis of such reasoning, as strategies affect tradeoffs between cognitive resources. Participants were presented with a two-player game that required reasoning about the mental states of the opponent. Game theory literature discerns two candidate strategies that participants could use in this game: either forward reasoning or backward reasoning. Forward reasoning proceeds from the first decision point to the last, whereas backward reasoning proceeds in the opposite direction. Backward reasoning is the only optimal strategy, because the optimal outcome is known at each decision point. Nevertheless, we argue that participants prefer forward reasoning because it is similar to causal reasoning. Causal reasoning, in turn, is prevalent in human reasoning. Eye movements were measured to discern between forward and backward progressions of fixations. The observed fixation sequences corresponded best with forward reasoning. Early in games, the probability of observing a forward progression of fixations is higher than the probability of observing a backward progression. Later in games, the probabilities of forward and backward progressions are similar, which seems to imply that participants were either applying backward reasoning or jumping back to previous decision points while applying forward reasoning. Thus, the game-theoretical favorite strategy, backward reasoning, does seem to exist in human reasoning. However, participants preferred the more familiar, practiced, and prevalent strategy: forward reasoning.

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Article in Pdf file (for personal use onlyWhat Eye Movements Can Tell about Theory of Mind in a Strategic Game
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Φύση και ανάπτυξη της Θεωρίας του Νου

ΠΑΝΕΠΙΣΤΗΜΙΟ ΚΡΗΤΗΣ Π.Τ.Δ.Ε

ΣΕΜΙΝΑΡΙΟ: Θέματα Γνωστικής Ψυχολογίας ΔΙΔΑΣΚΟΥΣΑ: Κ. Βασιλάκη Ελένη
ΕΙΣΗΓΗΤΕΣ: Διακουμάκος Στάθης, Βιενά Έλενα
ΘΕΜΑ ΕΡΓΑΣΙΑΣ: Φύση και ανάπτυξη της Θεωρίας του Νου

Αρχείο σε μορφή Pdf (για προσωπική χρήση)

Φύση και ανάπτυξη της Θεωρίας του Νου

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ResearchBlogging.org
Ben Meijering, Hedderik van Rijn, Niels A. Taatgen, & Rineke Verbrugge1 (2012).
What Eye Movements Can Tell about Theory of Mind in a Strategic Game
PLoS ONE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0045961

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