Object-based attention operates on perceptual objects, opening the possibility that the costs and benefits humans have to pay to move attention between-objects might be affected by the nature of the stimuli. The current study reported two experiments with adults and 8-month-old infants investigating whether object-based-attention is affected by the type of stimulus (faces vs. non-faces stimuli). Using the well-known cueing task developed by Egly et al. (1994) to study the object-based component of attention, in Experiment 1 adult participants were presented with two upright, inverted or scrambled faces and an eye-tracker measured their saccadic latencies to find a target that could appear on the same object that was just cued or on the other object that was uncued. Data showed that an object-based effect (a smaller cost to shift attention within- compared to between-objects) occurred only with scrambled face, but not with upright or inverted faces. In Experiment 2 the same task was performed with 8-month-old infants, using upright and inverted faces. Data revealed that an object-based effect emerges only for inverted faces but not for upright faces. Overall, these findings suggest that object-based attention is modulated by the type of stimulus and by the experience acquired by the viewer with different objects. © 2014 Valenza, Franchin and Bulf.

Valenza, E., Franchin, L., Bulf, H. (2014). How a face may affect object-based attention: Evidence from adults and 8-month-old infants. FRONTIERS IN INTEGRATIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 8 [10.3389/fnint.2014.00027].

How a face may affect object-based attention: Evidence from adults and 8-month-old infants

BULF, HERMANN SERGIO
2014

Abstract

Object-based attention operates on perceptual objects, opening the possibility that the costs and benefits humans have to pay to move attention between-objects might be affected by the nature of the stimuli. The current study reported two experiments with adults and 8-month-old infants investigating whether object-based-attention is affected by the type of stimulus (faces vs. non-faces stimuli). Using the well-known cueing task developed by Egly et al. (1994) to study the object-based component of attention, in Experiment 1 adult participants were presented with two upright, inverted or scrambled faces and an eye-tracker measured their saccadic latencies to find a target that could appear on the same object that was just cued or on the other object that was uncued. Data showed that an object-based effect (a smaller cost to shift attention within- compared to between-objects) occurred only with scrambled face, but not with upright or inverted faces. In Experiment 2 the same task was performed with 8-month-old infants, using upright and inverted faces. Data revealed that an object-based effect emerges only for inverted faces but not for upright faces. Overall, these findings suggest that object-based attention is modulated by the type of stimulus and by the experience acquired by the viewer with different objects. © 2014 Valenza, Franchin and Bulf.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
object-based attention, visual attention, faces, eye-tracker, infancy
English
2014
8
27
none
Valenza, E., Franchin, L., Bulf, H. (2014). How a face may affect object-based attention: Evidence from adults and 8-month-old infants. FRONTIERS IN INTEGRATIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 8 [10.3389/fnint.2014.00027].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/53757
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