How Do Women and Men Look at the Past? Large Scanpath in Women during Autobiographical Retrieval—A Preliminary Study

Author:

El Haj Mohamad123ORCID,Boutoleau-Bretonnière Claire4,Guerrero Sastoque Lina1,Lenoble Quentin5,Moustafa Ahmed A.67,Chapelet Guillaume2,Sarda Elisa1,Ndobo André1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire de Psychologie des Pays de la Loire, Nantes Université, 44000 Nantes, France

2. Centre Hospitalier Universitaire in Nantes, Clinical Gerontology Department, Bd Jacques Monod, 44093 Nantes, France

3. Institut Universitaire de France, 75000 Paris, France

4. Centre Hospitalier Universitaire in Nantes, Inserm Centre d’Investigation Clinique, 44000 Nantes, France

5. Inserm, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire in Lille, Lille Neuroscience & Cognition, University of Lille, 59000 Lille, France

6. School of Psychology, Faculty of Society and Design, Bond University, Gold Coast, QLD 4229, Australia

7. Department of Human Anatomy and Physiology, The Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg 2006, South Africa

Abstract

While research has consistently demonstrated how autobiographical memory triggers visual exploration, prior studies did not investigate gender differences in this domain. We thus compared eye movement between women and men while performing an autobiographical retrieval task. We invited 35 women and 35 men to retrieve autobiographical memories while their gaze was monitored by an eye tracker. We further investigated gender differences in eye movement and autobiographical specificity, that is, the ability to retrieve detailed memories. The analysis demonstrated shorter fixations, larger duration and amplitude of saccades, and higher autobiographical specificity in women than in men. The significant gender differences in eye movement disappeared after controlling for autobiographical specificity. When retrieving autobiographical memory, female participants generated a large scan with short fixation and high saccade amplitude, while male participants increased their fixation duration and showed poorer gaze scan. The large saccades in women during autobiographical retrieval may constitute an exploratory gaze behavior enabling better autobiographical memory functioning, which is reflected by the larger number of autobiographical details retrieved compared to men.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Neuroscience

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