Inferring social context from observing the behaviour of others

Past research tells us that individuals can infer information about a target’s emotional state and intentions from their facial expressions (Frith & Frith, 2012), a process known as mentalising. More recently, it has been found that this ability extends to inferring the events that caused the fa...

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Main Author: Teoh, Yvonne Kah Hooi
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/35854/
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author Teoh, Yvonne Kah Hooi
author_facet Teoh, Yvonne Kah Hooi
author_sort Teoh, Yvonne Kah Hooi
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Past research tells us that individuals can infer information about a target’s emotional state and intentions from their facial expressions (Frith & Frith, 2012), a process known as mentalising. More recently, it has been found that this ability extends to inferring the events that caused the facial reaction (e.g. Pillai, Sheppard, & Mitchell, 2012; Pillai et al., 2014), an ability known as retrodictive mindreading. In the current thesis, we enter a new territory where a series of experiments was conducted to investigate whether people (perceivers) can guess a target’s social context by observing their response to emotional stimuli. The core findings were: 1) perceivers were able to discriminate whether the targets were alone or observed by another person, 2) without any knowledge of the social context or what the targets were watching, perceivers judged whether targets were hiding or exaggerating their facial expressions, and their judgments discriminated between conditions in which targets were observed and alone, and 3) perceivers’ eye movements also systematically discriminated between conditions in which targets were observed and alone. Perceivers were thus able to infer – explicitly or implicitly - a target’s social context by observing their emotional response. Therefore, the findings demonstrate that people have the ability to use other people’s minds as a window onto a social context that could not be seen directly.
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spelling nottingham-358542025-02-28T11:50:29Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/35854/ Inferring social context from observing the behaviour of others Teoh, Yvonne Kah Hooi Past research tells us that individuals can infer information about a target’s emotional state and intentions from their facial expressions (Frith & Frith, 2012), a process known as mentalising. More recently, it has been found that this ability extends to inferring the events that caused the facial reaction (e.g. Pillai, Sheppard, & Mitchell, 2012; Pillai et al., 2014), an ability known as retrodictive mindreading. In the current thesis, we enter a new territory where a series of experiments was conducted to investigate whether people (perceivers) can guess a target’s social context by observing their response to emotional stimuli. The core findings were: 1) perceivers were able to discriminate whether the targets were alone or observed by another person, 2) without any knowledge of the social context or what the targets were watching, perceivers judged whether targets were hiding or exaggerating their facial expressions, and their judgments discriminated between conditions in which targets were observed and alone, and 3) perceivers’ eye movements also systematically discriminated between conditions in which targets were observed and alone. Perceivers were thus able to infer – explicitly or implicitly - a target’s social context by observing their emotional response. Therefore, the findings demonstrate that people have the ability to use other people’s minds as a window onto a social context that could not be seen directly. 2017-02-18 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/35854/1/Yvonne%27s%20Revised%20Thesis%202.pdf Teoh, Yvonne Kah Hooi (2017) Inferring social context from observing the behaviour of others. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. mentalising social context eye movements inferences retrodiction
spellingShingle mentalising
social context
eye movements
inferences
retrodiction
Teoh, Yvonne Kah Hooi
Inferring social context from observing the behaviour of others
title Inferring social context from observing the behaviour of others
title_full Inferring social context from observing the behaviour of others
title_fullStr Inferring social context from observing the behaviour of others
title_full_unstemmed Inferring social context from observing the behaviour of others
title_short Inferring social context from observing the behaviour of others
title_sort inferring social context from observing the behaviour of others
topic mentalising
social context
eye movements
inferences
retrodiction
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/35854/