Title of article
Coordinating cognition: The costs and benefits of shared gaze during collaborative search
Author/Authors
Brennan، نويسنده , , Susan E. and Chen، نويسنده , , Xin and Dickinson، نويسنده , , Christopher A. and Neider، نويسنده , , Mark B. and Zelinsky، نويسنده , , Gregory J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
13
From page
1465
To page
1477
Abstract
Collaboration has its benefits, but coordination has its costs. We explored the potential for remotely located pairs of people to collaborate during visual search, using shared gaze and speech. Pairs of searchers wearing eyetrackers jointly performed an O-in-Qs search task alone, or in one of three collaboration conditions: shared gaze (with one searcher seeing a gaze-cursor indicating where the other was looking, and vice versa), shared-voice (by speaking to each other), and shared-gaze-plus-voice (by using both gaze-cursors and speech). Although collaborating pairs performed better than solitary searchers, search in the shared gaze condition was best of all: twice as fast and efficient as solitary search. People can successfully communicate and coordinate their searching labor using shared gaze alone. Strikingly, shared gaze search was even faster than shared-gaze-plus-voice search; speaking incurred substantial coordination costs. We conclude that shared gaze affords a highly efficient method of coordinating parallel activity in a time-critical spatial task.
Keywords
coordination , Eye gaze , Collaborative visual search , Communication , Grounding , Shared attention , Shared gaze
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2076185
Link To Document