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Journal ArticleDOI

What minds have in common is space : Spatial mechanisms serving joint visual attention in infancy

TLDR
For instance, this article showed that infants look where someone else is looking in the first 18 months of their life, by extrapolating from the orientation of the mother's head and eyes to the intersection of the line of sight within a relatively precise zone of the infant's own visual space.
Abstract
A series of experiments is reported which show that three successive mechanisms are involved in the first 18 months of life in ‘looking where someone else is looking’. The earliest ‘ecological’ mechanism enables the infant to detect the direction of the adult's visual gaze within the baby's visual field but the mother's signal alone does not allow the precise localization of the target. Joint attention to the same physical object also depends on the intrinsic, attention-capturing properties of the object in the environment. By about 12 months, we have evidence for presence of a new ‘geometric’ mechanism. The infant extrapolates from the orientation of the mother's head and eyes, the intersection of the mother's line of sight within a relatively precise zone of the infant's own visual space. A third ‘representational’ mechanism emerges between 12 and 18 months, with an extension of joint reference to places outside the infant's visual field. None of these mechanisms require the infant to have a theory that others have minds; rather the perceptual systems of different observers ‘meet’ in encountering the same objects and events in the world. Such a ‘realist’ basis for interpersonal knowledge may offer an alternative starting point for development of intrapersonal knowledge, rather than the view that mental events can only be known by construction of a theory.

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Book

Demonstratives and Possessives with Attitude: An intersubjectively-oriented empirical study

TL;DR: The authors investigates the use of demonstrative and possessive determiners in Polish discourse and proposes that the phenomenon of deixis be reexamined in the light of linguistic variation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Where's the person?

TL;DR: Gopnik as discussed by the authors is a behaviorist who renounced behaviorism and renounced the notion of internal psychological states (i.e., psychological states are states whose specification requires knowledge about people, their behavior and their circumstances) and, while a psychological state may be caused by events in the braincase or body of a person, the state itself is of the person, not inside it.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Unified Account of Gaze Following

TL;DR: From a starting state with no knowledge of the implications of another organism's gaze direction, this model learns to follow gaze by being placed in a simulated environment where an adult caregiver looks around at objects.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Acquisition of human-robot joint attention through real-time natural interaction

TL;DR: The proposed architecture for acquiring joint attention within a certain time period for realizing natural human-robot interaction is implemented and can conclude that even if the gaze preference of the robot is different from that of the human caregiver, it can acquire joint attention.
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