Making commitments to cooperate facilitates cooperation. There is a long-standing theoretical debate about how promissory obligations come into existence, and whether linguistic acts (such as saying “I promise”) are a necessary part of the process. To inform this debate we experimentally investigated whether even minimal, nonverbal behavior can be taken as a commitment to cooperate, as long as it is communicative. Five- to 7-year-old children played a Stag Hunt coordination game in which they needed to decide whether to cooperate or play individually. During the decision-making phase, children’s partner made either ostensive, communicative eye contact or looked non-communicatively at them. In Study 1 we found that communicative looks produc...
In face-to-face interaction people adapt their multimodal message to fit their addressees’ informati...
Contains fulltext : 198191.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Actions may be ...
Corpus "Fonds audiovisuel Institut Jean Nicod - Programme ESCoM-AAR"Lecture 3. The Early Ontogeny of...
Making commitments to cooperate facilitates cooperation. There is a long-standing theoretical debate...
Communication is a powerful tool for promoting cooperation in adults and is considered one of the mo...
Joint attention—the ability to coordinate attention to an object or event—is a key feature of human ...
Through cooperation, it is possible to achieve goals that are impossible to accomplish as an individ...
Social norms of cooperation are studied under several forms of communication. In an experiment, stra...
The problem with collaboration is that there are temptations to defect. Explicit joint commitments a...
According to several psychological and economic studies, non-binding communication can be an effecti...
Within the animal kingdom, human cooperation represents an outlier. As such, there has been great in...
Can commitments be generated without promises or gestures conventionally interpreted as such? We hyp...
The goal of the current research was to investigate the potential relationship between joint attenti...
Within the animal kingdom, human cooperation represents an outlier. As such, there has been great in...
This paper investigates infant pointing at 12 months. Three recent experimental studies from our lab...
In face-to-face interaction people adapt their multimodal message to fit their addressees’ informati...
Contains fulltext : 198191.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Actions may be ...
Corpus "Fonds audiovisuel Institut Jean Nicod - Programme ESCoM-AAR"Lecture 3. The Early Ontogeny of...
Making commitments to cooperate facilitates cooperation. There is a long-standing theoretical debate...
Communication is a powerful tool for promoting cooperation in adults and is considered one of the mo...
Joint attention—the ability to coordinate attention to an object or event—is a key feature of human ...
Through cooperation, it is possible to achieve goals that are impossible to accomplish as an individ...
Social norms of cooperation are studied under several forms of communication. In an experiment, stra...
The problem with collaboration is that there are temptations to defect. Explicit joint commitments a...
According to several psychological and economic studies, non-binding communication can be an effecti...
Within the animal kingdom, human cooperation represents an outlier. As such, there has been great in...
Can commitments be generated without promises or gestures conventionally interpreted as such? We hyp...
The goal of the current research was to investigate the potential relationship between joint attenti...
Within the animal kingdom, human cooperation represents an outlier. As such, there has been great in...
This paper investigates infant pointing at 12 months. Three recent experimental studies from our lab...
In face-to-face interaction people adapt their multimodal message to fit their addressees’ informati...
Contains fulltext : 198191.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Actions may be ...
Corpus "Fonds audiovisuel Institut Jean Nicod - Programme ESCoM-AAR"Lecture 3. The Early Ontogeny of...