This paper seeks to bring together two previously separate research traditions:r esearch on spatial orienting within the visual cueing paradigm and research into social cognition, addressing our tendency to attend in the direction that another person looks. Cueing methodologies from mainstream attention research were adapted to test the automaticity of orienting in the direction of seen gaze. Three studiesmanipulatedthedirectionofgazeinacomputerizedface,whichappeared centrally in a frontalview during a peripheralletter-discrimination task.Experiments 1 and 2 found faster discrimination of peripheral target letters on the side the computerized face gazed towards, even though the seen gaze did not predict targetside,and despite participantsbeingasked to ignore the face.This suggests reflexiv ecovert and/or overt orienting in thedirection ofseen gaze,arising even when the observer has no motivation to orient in this way. Experiment 3 found faster letter discrimination on the side the computerized face gazed toward seven when participants knew that target letters were four times as likely on the opposite side.Thissuggeststhatorienting can arise in the direction of seen gaze even when counter to intentions. The experiments illustrate that methods from mainstream attention research can be usefully applied to social cognition, and that studies of spatial attention may profit from considering its social function
Driver, J., Davis, G., Ricciardelli, P., Kidd, P., Maxwell, E., Baron Cohen, S. (1999). Gaze perception triggers reflexive visuospatial orienting. VISUAL COGNITION, 6(5), 509-540 [10.1080/135062899394920].
Gaze perception triggers reflexive visuospatial orienting
RICCIARDELLI, PAOLA;
1999
Abstract
This paper seeks to bring together two previously separate research traditions:r esearch on spatial orienting within the visual cueing paradigm and research into social cognition, addressing our tendency to attend in the direction that another person looks. Cueing methodologies from mainstream attention research were adapted to test the automaticity of orienting in the direction of seen gaze. Three studiesmanipulatedthedirectionofgazeinacomputerizedface,whichappeared centrally in a frontalview during a peripheralletter-discrimination task.Experiments 1 and 2 found faster discrimination of peripheral target letters on the side the computerized face gazed towards, even though the seen gaze did not predict targetside,and despite participantsbeingasked to ignore the face.This suggests reflexiv ecovert and/or overt orienting in thedirection ofseen gaze,arising even when the observer has no motivation to orient in this way. Experiment 3 found faster letter discrimination on the side the computerized face gazed toward seven when participants knew that target letters were four times as likely on the opposite side.Thissuggeststhatorienting can arise in the direction of seen gaze even when counter to intentions. The experiments illustrate that methods from mainstream attention research can be usefully applied to social cognition, and that studies of spatial attention may profit from considering its social functionI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.