Measuring Variation in Gaze Following Across Communities, Ages, and Individuals: A Showcase of TANGO-CC (Task for Assessing iNdividual differences in Gaze understanding-Open-Cross-Cultural)

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Authors

  • Florian M. Bednarski
  • Ardain Dzabatou
  • Michael C. Frank
  • Annette M. E. Henderson
  • Josefine Kalbitz
  • Patricia Kanngiesser
  • Dilara Kessafoglu
  • Bahar Koymen
  • Maira V. Manrique-Hernandez
  • Shirley Magazi
  • Lizbeth Mujica-Manrique
  • Julia Ohlendorf
  • Damilola Olaoba
  • Wesley R. Pieters
  • Sarah Pope-Caldwell
  • Umay Sen
  • Katie Slocombe
  • Robert Z. Sparks
  • Roman Stengelin
  • Jahnavi Sunderarajan
  • Kirsten Sutherland
  • Florence Tusiime
  • Wilson Vieira
  • Zhen Zhang
  • Yufei Zong
  • Daniel B. M. Haun
Cross-cultural studies are crucial for investigating the cultural variability and universality of cognitive developmental processes. However, cross-cultural assessment tools in cognition across languages and communities are limited. In this article, we describe a gaze-following task designed to measure basic social cognition across individuals, ages, and communities (the Task for Assessing iNdividual differences in Gaze understanding-Open-Cross-Cultural; TANGO-CC). The task was developed and psychometrically assessed in one cultural setting and, with input of local collaborators, adapted for cross-cultural data collection. Minimal language demands and the web-app implementation allow fast and easy contextual adaptations to each community. TANGO-CC captures individual- and community-level variation and shows good internal consistency in a data set of 2.5- to 11-year-old children from 17 diverse communities. Within-communities variation outweighed between-communities variation. We provide an open-source website for researchers to customize and use the task (https://ccp-odc.eva.mpg.de/tango-cc). TANGO-CC can be used to assess basic social cognition in diverse communities and provides a roadmap for researching community-level and individual-level differences across cultures.
Original languageEnglish
Journal Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science
Volume8
Issue number1
Number of pages16
ISSN2515-2459
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.2025

    Research areas

  • Cross-cultural psychology, Gaze following, Individual differences, Open data, Open materials, Reliability, Social cognition
  • Psychology