Head-mounted eye tracking of a chimpanzee under naturalistic conditions.

This study offers a new method for examining the bodily, manual, and eye movements of a chimpanzee at the micro-level. A female chimpanzee wore a lightweight head-mounted eye tracker (60 Hz) on her head while engaging in daily interactions with the human experimenter. The eye tracker recorded her ey...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fumihiro Kano, Masaki Tomonaga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/23544099/?tool=EBI
_version_ 1818337534455840768
author Fumihiro Kano
Masaki Tomonaga
author_facet Fumihiro Kano
Masaki Tomonaga
author_sort Fumihiro Kano
collection DOAJ
description This study offers a new method for examining the bodily, manual, and eye movements of a chimpanzee at the micro-level. A female chimpanzee wore a lightweight head-mounted eye tracker (60 Hz) on her head while engaging in daily interactions with the human experimenter. The eye tracker recorded her eye movements accurately while the chimpanzee freely moved her head, hands, and body. Three video cameras recorded the bodily and manual movements of the chimpanzee from multiple angles. We examined how the chimpanzee viewed the experimenter in this interactive setting and how the eye movements were related to the ongoing interactive contexts and actions. We prepared two experimentally defined contexts in each session: a face-to-face greeting phase upon the appearance of the experimenter in the experimental room, and a subsequent face-to-face task phase that included manual gestures and fruit rewards. Overall, the general viewing pattern of the chimpanzee, measured in terms of duration of individual fixations, length of individual saccades, and total viewing duration of the experimenter's face/body, was very similar to that observed in previous eye-tracking studies that used non-interactive situations, despite the differences in the experimental settings. However, the chimpanzee viewed the experimenter and the scene objects differently depending on the ongoing context and actions. The chimpanzee viewed the experimenter's face and body during the greeting phase, but viewed the experimenter's face and hands as well as the fruit reward during the task phase. These differences can be explained by the differential bodily/manual actions produced by the chimpanzee and the experimenter during each experimental phase (i.e., greeting gestures, task cueing). Additionally, the chimpanzee's viewing pattern varied depending on the identity of the experimenter (i.e., the chimpanzee's prior experience with the experimenter). These methods and results offer new possibilities for examining the natural gaze behavior of chimpanzees.
first_indexed 2024-12-13T14:56:45Z
format Article
id doaj.art-d17ef9579b354e87965abb02401fb754
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-13T14:56:45Z
publishDate 2013-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-d17ef9579b354e87965abb02401fb7542022-12-21T23:41:13ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0183e5978510.1371/journal.pone.0059785Head-mounted eye tracking of a chimpanzee under naturalistic conditions.Fumihiro KanoMasaki TomonagaThis study offers a new method for examining the bodily, manual, and eye movements of a chimpanzee at the micro-level. A female chimpanzee wore a lightweight head-mounted eye tracker (60 Hz) on her head while engaging in daily interactions with the human experimenter. The eye tracker recorded her eye movements accurately while the chimpanzee freely moved her head, hands, and body. Three video cameras recorded the bodily and manual movements of the chimpanzee from multiple angles. We examined how the chimpanzee viewed the experimenter in this interactive setting and how the eye movements were related to the ongoing interactive contexts and actions. We prepared two experimentally defined contexts in each session: a face-to-face greeting phase upon the appearance of the experimenter in the experimental room, and a subsequent face-to-face task phase that included manual gestures and fruit rewards. Overall, the general viewing pattern of the chimpanzee, measured in terms of duration of individual fixations, length of individual saccades, and total viewing duration of the experimenter's face/body, was very similar to that observed in previous eye-tracking studies that used non-interactive situations, despite the differences in the experimental settings. However, the chimpanzee viewed the experimenter and the scene objects differently depending on the ongoing context and actions. The chimpanzee viewed the experimenter's face and body during the greeting phase, but viewed the experimenter's face and hands as well as the fruit reward during the task phase. These differences can be explained by the differential bodily/manual actions produced by the chimpanzee and the experimenter during each experimental phase (i.e., greeting gestures, task cueing). Additionally, the chimpanzee's viewing pattern varied depending on the identity of the experimenter (i.e., the chimpanzee's prior experience with the experimenter). These methods and results offer new possibilities for examining the natural gaze behavior of chimpanzees.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/23544099/?tool=EBI
spellingShingle Fumihiro Kano
Masaki Tomonaga
Head-mounted eye tracking of a chimpanzee under naturalistic conditions.
PLoS ONE
title Head-mounted eye tracking of a chimpanzee under naturalistic conditions.
title_full Head-mounted eye tracking of a chimpanzee under naturalistic conditions.
title_fullStr Head-mounted eye tracking of a chimpanzee under naturalistic conditions.
title_full_unstemmed Head-mounted eye tracking of a chimpanzee under naturalistic conditions.
title_short Head-mounted eye tracking of a chimpanzee under naturalistic conditions.
title_sort head mounted eye tracking of a chimpanzee under naturalistic conditions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/23544099/?tool=EBI
work_keys_str_mv AT fumihirokano headmountedeyetrackingofachimpanzeeundernaturalisticconditions
AT masakitomonaga headmountedeyetrackingofachimpanzeeundernaturalisticconditions