| Literature DB >> 26562916 |
Mario Dalmaso1, Giovanni Galfano2, Luigi Castelli2.
Abstract
Two experiments were aimed at investigating whether the implementation of voluntary saccades in White participants could be modulated more strongly by gaze distractors embedded in White versus Black faces. Participants were instructed to make a rightward or leftward saccade, depending on a central directional cue. Saccade direction could be either congruent or incongruent with gaze direction of the distractor face. In Experiment 1, White faces produced greater interference on saccadic accuracy than Black faces when the averted-gaze face and cue onset were simultaneous rather than separated by a 900-ms asynchrony. In Experiment 2, two temporal intervals (50 ms vs. 1,000 ms) occurred between the initial presentation of the face with direct-gaze and the averted-gaze face onset, whereas the averted-gaze face and cue onset were synchronous. A greater interference emerged for White versus Black faces irrespective of the temporal interval. Overall, these findings suggest that saccadic generation system is sensitive to features of face stimuli conveying eye gaze.Entities:
Keywords: eye tracking; saccadic eye movements; social cognition; visual attention
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26562916 DOI: 10.1177/0301006615594936
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perception ISSN: 0301-0066 Impact factor: 1.490