| Literature DB >> 24976664 |
Adam Palanica1, Roxane J Itier1.
Abstract
Eye-tracking was used to investigate whether gaze direction would influence the visual scanning of faces, when presented in the context of a full character, in different social settings, and with different task demands. Participants viewed individual computer agents against either a blank background or a bar scene setting, during both a free-viewing task and an attractiveness rating task for each character. Faces with a direct gaze were viewed longer than faces with an averted gaze regardless of body context, social settings, and task demands. Additionally, participants evaluated characters with a direct gaze as more attractive than characters with an averted gaze. These results, obtained with pictures of computer agents rather than real people, suggest that direct gaze is a powerful attention grabbing stimulus that is robust to background context or task demands.Entities:
Keywords: Body scanning; Eye-tracking; Gaze direction
Year: 2012 PMID: 24976664 PMCID: PMC4072644 DOI: 10.1007/s10919-011-0128-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nonverbal Behav ISSN: 0191-5886