Literature DB >> 30603864

The eyes do not have it after all? Attention is not automatically biased towards faces and eyes.

Effie J Pereira1, Elina Birmingham2, Jelena Ristic3.   

Abstract

It is commonly accepted that attention is spontaneously biased towards faces and eyes. However, the role of stimulus features and task settings in this finding has not yet been systematically investigated. Here, we tested if faces and facial features bias attention spontaneously when stimulus factors, task properties, response conditions, and eye movements are controlled. In three experiments, participants viewed face, house, and control scrambled face-house images in an upright and inverted orientation. The task was to discriminate a target that appeared with equal probability at the previous location of the face, house, or the control image. In all experiments, our data indicated no spontaneous biasing of attention for targets occurring at the previous location of the face. Experiment 3, which measured oculomotor biasing, suggested a reliable but infrequent saccadic bias towards the eye region of upright faces. Importantly, these results did not reflect our specific laboratory settings, as in Experiment 4, we present a full replication of a classic finding in the literature demonstrating reliable social attention bias. Together, these data suggest that attentional biasing for social information is task and context mediated, and less robust than originally thought.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 30603864     DOI: 10.1007/s00426-018-1130-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Res        ISSN: 0340-0727


  6 in total

1.  Do eyes and arrows elicit automatic orienting? Three mutually exclusive hypotheses and a test.

Authors:  Derek Besner; David McLean; Torin Young
Journal:  Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)       Date:  2021-03-19       Impact factor: 2.143

2.  Task-related gaze control in human crowd navigation.

Authors:  Roy S Hessels; Andrea J van Doorn; Jeroen S Benjamins; Gijs A Holleman; Ignace T C Hooge
Journal:  Atten Percept Psychophys       Date:  2020-07       Impact factor: 2.199

3.  Contextually-Based Social Attention Diverges across Covert and Overt Measures.

Authors:  Effie J Pereira; Elina Birmingham; Jelena Ristic
Journal:  Vision (Basel)       Date:  2019-06-10

4.  Reading and Misleading: Changes in Head and Eye Movements Reveal Attentional Orienting in a Social Context.

Authors:  Tom Foulsham; Monika Gejdosova; Laura Caunt
Journal:  Vision (Basel)       Date:  2019-08-27

Review 5.  How does gaze to faces support face-to-face interaction? A review and perspective.

Authors:  Roy S Hessels
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2020-10

6.  Altered social cognition in a community sample of women with disordered eating behaviours: a multi-method approach.

Authors:  Devon S Heath; Nimrit Jhinjar; Dana A Hayward
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-07-19       Impact factor: 4.379

  6 in total

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