6533b871fe1ef96bd12d1012

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Joint attention behaviour in remote collaborative problem solving : exploring different attentional levels in dyadic interaction

Suzanne OtienoNafisa AwwalJohanna Pöysä-tarhonenPäivi Häkkinen

subject

Joint attentionSocial PsychologyInteractionProcess-oriented researchExploratory researchContext (language use)Information technologysosiaalinen vuorovaikutus050105 experimental psychologyyhteistyöEducationLive eye trackingManagement of Technology and InnovationCommon knowledgeMedia Technologyetäosallistuminen0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesyhteisöllinen oppiminentarkkaavaisuus05 social sciencesCollaborative problem solvingEducational technology050301 educationCognitionJointnessT58.5-58.64Joint attention behaviourDyadic interactionkatseenseurantaongelmanratkaisuPsychology0503 educationCognitive psychology

description

AbstractThe current article describes an exploratory study that focussed on joint attention behaviour—the basis of interaction predicting productive collaboration—to better understand collaborative problem solving, particularly its social aspects during remote dyadic interaction. The study considered joint attention behaviour as a socio-linguistic phenomenon and relied on detailed qualitative interaction analysis on event-related measures of multiple observational data (i.e. log files, eye-tracking data). The aim was to illustrate and exemplify how the diverse attentional levels of joint attention behaviour (i.e. monitoring, common, mutual and shared attention) delineated by Siposova and Carpenter (Cognition 89:260–274, 2019) were achieved in remote collaborative problem solving in dyads, including the underlying basis of joint attention behaviour (i.e. individual attention experience). The results made visible the complex functioning of the social aspects of remote collaborative problem solving and provided preliminary insights into how the hierarchical and nested levels of ‘jointness’ and common knowledge were achieved in this context. The analysis reproduced all the theorised attentional levels as both isolated and parallel individualistic attention experiences whilst acknowledging the restrictions of the remote interaction environment and the specific task structures.

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202105062642