Abstract

Human crowds provide an interesting case for research on the perception of people. In this study, we investigate how visual information is acquired for (1) navigating human crowds and (2) seeking out social affordances in crowds by studying gaze behavior during human crowd navigation under different task instructions. Observers (n = 11) wore head-mounted eye-tracking glasses and walked two rounds through hallways containing walking crowds (n = 38) and static objects. For round one, observers were instructed to avoid collisions. For round two, observers furthermore had to indicate with a button press whether oncoming people made eye contact. Task performance (walking speed, absence of collisions) was similar across rounds. Fixation durations indicated that heads, bodies, objects, and walls maintained gaze comparably long. Only crowds in the distance maintained gaze relatively longer. We find no compelling evidence that human bodies and heads hold one’s gaze more than objects while navigating crowds. When eye contact was assessed, heads were fixated more often and for a total longer duration, which came at the cost of looking at bodies. We conclude that gaze behavior in crowd navigation is task-dependent, and that not every fixation is strictly necessary for navigating crowds. When explicitly tasked with seeking out potential social affordances, gaze is modulated as a result. We discuss our findings in the light of current theories and models of gaze behavior. Furthermore, we show that in a head-mounted eye-tracking study, a large degree of experimental control can be maintained while many degrees of freedom on the side of the observer remain.

Highlights

  • Human crowds present an interesting case for the study of vision

  • We investigate how visual information is acquired for these two processes by studying gaze behavior during human crowd navigation under different task instructions

  • As we want to know whether any changes in gaze behavior across rounds are related to task performance or not

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Summary

Introduction

Human crowds present an interesting case for the study of vision. Navigating human crowds requires locomotion while avoiding obstacles, both those which are fixed to the world and those which move. The faces and bodies of other humans may carry important visual information about potential interactions (i.e., whether one could strike up a conversation, or whether one might need to prepare for aggressive behavior). In this regard, it has been shown that human faces, for example, tend to attract and maintain attention (e.g., Bindemann et al (2005) and Langton et al (2008)), as evidenced by longer reaction times to competing objects in the presence of faces. We investigate how visual information is acquired for these two processes by studying gaze behavior during human crowd navigation under different task instructions

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