The eye contact effect in request and emblematic hand gestures |
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Authors: | Francesca Ferri Marianna Busiello Giovanna C. Campione Elisa De Stefani Alessandro Innocenti Gian Luca Romani Marcello Costantini Maurizio Gentilucci |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Neuroscience, Section of Physiology, University of Parma, , I‐43100 Parma, Italy;2. Laboratory of Neuropsychology and Cognitive Neuroscience, Department of Neuroscience and Imaging, University G. d'Annunzio, , Chieti, Italy;3. Institute for Advanced Biomedical Technologies, Foundation University G. d'Annunzio, , Chieti, Italy;4. Health Sciences Department, Milan University, , Milano, Italy;5. Rete Multidisciplinare Tecnologica, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia and University of Parma, , Parma, Italy |
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Abstract: | Request and emblematic gestures, despite being both communicative gestures, do differ in terms of social valence. Indeed, only the former are used to initiate/maintain/terminate an actual interaction. If such a difference is at stake, a relevant social cue, i.e. eye contact, should have different impacts on the neuronal underpinnings of the two types of gesture. We measured blood oxygen level‐dependent signals, using functional magnetic resonance imaging, while participants watched videos of an actor, either blindfolded or not, performing emblems, request gestures, or meaningless control movements. A left‐lateralized network was more activated by both types of communicative gestures than by meaningless movements, regardless of the accessibility of the actor's eyes. Strikingly, when eye contact was taken into account as a factor, a right‐lateralized network was more strongly activated by emblematic gestures performed by the non‐blindfolded actor than by those performed by the blindfolded actor. Such modulation possibly reflects the integration of information conveyed by the eyes with the representation of emblems. Conversely, a wider right‐lateralized network was more strongly activated by request gestures performed by the blindfolded than by those performed by the non‐blindfolded actor. This probably reflects the effect of the conflict between the observed action and its associated contextual information, in which relevant social cues are missing. |
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Keywords: | communicative gestures functional magnetic resonance imaging gesture representation social gaze social intention |
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