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DYSWIS - Spontaneous Spatial Perspective-Taking

Description

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DYSWIS_Male_Actor

Built with Task Builder 2

DYSWIS task with male actor.

The Do You See What I See (DYSWIS) task consists of a set of pictures depicting an anonymous peer seated behind a table and facing the participant. On the table, there was a target object and, on each trial, participants were required to answer a simple question regarding its location or the location of its components. For example, participants could be asked if the object was on the right or on the left. Across trials, participants provided answers by clicking on one of two response buttons. The questions and options provided, which change between trials, are configured to reveal if participants take their own perspective (egocentric answer), or the actor’s perspective (altercentric response). The target object and corresponding question changed depending on the condition. It is composed of four conditions of six trials each.

Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY)


Stagnitto, S. M., van Vugt, F., Chierchia, G., & Lecce, S. Do You See What I See (DYSWIS)? Understanding Individual Differences in Free Spatial Perspective-Taking, under review.


DYSWIS_Female_Actor

Built with Task Builder 2

DYSWIS task with female actor. The Do You See What I See (DYSWIS) task consists of a set of pictures depicting an anonymous peer seated behind a table and facing the participant. On the table, there was a target object and, on each trial, participants were required to answer a simple question regarding its location or the location of its components. For example, participants could be asked if the object was on the right or on the left. Across trials, participants provided answers by clicking on one of two response buttons. The questions and options provided, which change between trials, are configured to reveal if participants take their own perspective (egocentric answer), or the actor’s perspective (altercentric response). The target object and corresponding question changed depending on the condition. It is composed of four conditions of six trials each.

Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY)


Stagnitto, S. M., van Vugt, F., Chierchia, G., & Lecce, S. Do You See What I See (DYSWIS)? Understanding Individual Differences in Free Spatial Perspective-Taking, under review.

Public

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Preferred Citation Stagnitto, S. M., van Vugt, F., Chierchia, G., & Lecce, S. Do You See What I See (DYSWIS)? Understanding Individual Differences in Spontaneous Spatial Perspective-Taking, under review.
Published on 13 August 2024
Corresponding author Serena Maria Stagnitto PhD Student
Department of Brain and Behavioral Sciences
University of Pavia (Italy)