| Literature DB >> 30690268 |
Sarah J Thompson1, Tom Foulsham2, Susan R Leekam3, Catherine R G Jones4.
Abstract
The eyes are preferentially attended over other facial features and recent evidence suggests this bias is difficult to suppress. To further examine the automatic and volitional nature of this bias for eye information, we used a novel prompting face recognition paradigm in 41 adults and measured the location of their first fixations, overall dwell time and behavioural responses. First, patterns of eye gaze were measured during a free-viewing forced choice face recognition paradigm. Second, the task was repeated but with prompts to look to either the eyes or the mouth. Participants showed significantly more first fixations to the eyes than mouth, both when prompted to look at the eyes and when prompted to look at the mouth. The pattern of looking to the eyes when prompted was indistinguishable from the unprompted condition in which participants were free to look where they chose. Notably, the dwell time data demonstrated that the eye bias did not persist over the entire presentation period. Our results suggest a difficult-to-inhibit bias to initially orient to the eyes, which is superseded by volitional, top-down control of eye gaze. Further, the amount of looking to the eyes is at a maximum level spontaneously and cannot be enhanced by explicit instructions.Entities:
Keywords: Dwell time; Eye tracking; Face recognition; First fixation; Social attention
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30690268 DOI: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2019.01.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Psychol (Amst) ISSN: 0001-6918