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Minds Made for Sharing: Initiating Joint Attention Recruits Reward-related Neurocircuitry
2010
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
■ The ability and motivation to share attention is a unique aspect of human cognition. Despite its significance, the neural basis remains elusive. To investigate the neural correlates of joint attention, we developed a novel, interactive research paradigm in which participants' gaze behavior-as measured by an eye tracking device-was used to contingently control the gaze of a computer-animated character. Instructed that the character on screen was controlled by a real person outside the scanner,
doi:10.1162/jocn.2009.21401
pmid:19929761
fatcat:w3vkjnhzybgszojzkugzilmo3a