1. Eye contact avoidance in crowds: A large wearable eye-tracking study
- Author
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Hessels, Roy S., Benjamins, Jeroen S., Niehorster, Diederick C., van Doorn, Andrea J., Koenderink, Jan J., Holleman, Gijs A., de Kloe, Yentl J.R., Valtakari, Niilo V., van Hal, Sebas, Hooge, Ignace T.C., Leerstoel Kemner, Helmholtz Institute, Experimental Psychology (onderzoeksprogramma PF), Leerstoel Postma, Leerstoel Kenemans, Leerstoel Kemner, Helmholtz Institute, Experimental Psychology (onderzoeksprogramma PF), Leerstoel Postma, and Leerstoel Kenemans
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Wearable ,Eye contact ,Social Sciences ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Walking ,Fixation, Ocular ,Eye ,ALLOCATION ,Language and Linguistics ,Wearable Electronic Devices ,3-DIMENSIONAL EYE ,Psychology ,Humans ,HEAD ,STRATEGY ,Crowd navigation ,Eye-Tracking Technology ,DIRECTION ,Gaze ,REAL ,Eye tracking ,Psychology, Experimental ,ATTENTION ,Sensory Systems ,Crowding ,BEHAVIOR - Abstract
Eye contact is essential for human interactions. We investigated whether humans are able to avoid eye contact while navigating crowds. At a science festival, we fitted 62 participants with a wearable eye tracker and instructed them to walk a route. Half of the participants were further instructed to avoid eye contact. We report that humans can flexibly allocate their gaze while navigating crowds and avoid eye contact primarily by orienting their head and eyes towards the floor. We discuss implications for crowd navigation and gaze behavior. In addition, we address a number of issues encountered in such field studies with regard to data quality, control of the environment, and participant adherence to instructions. We stress that methodological innovation and scientific progress are strongly interrelated. ispartof: ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS vol:84 issue:8 pages:2623-2640 ispartof: location:United States status: published
- Published
- 2022