Can masked gaze and arrow stimuli elicit overt orienting of attention? A registered report.
Conscious Cogn
; 109: 103476, 2023 03.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-36774882
Viewing an averted gaze can elicit saccades towards the corresponding location. Here, the automaticity of this gaze-following behaviour phenomenon was further tested by exploring whether such an effect can be detected in response to briefly-presented masked averted gazes. Participants completed an oculomotor interference task consisting of making leftward/rightward saccades according to a symbolic instruction cue. Crucially, either a task-irrelevant averted-gaze face or an arrow (i.e., a non-social control stimulus) was also presented in different blocks of trials. Faces and arrows were presented for either 1000 ms, or 8 ms and then backward-masked, to reduce the likelihood of conscious processing. Worse oculomotor performance emerged when the saccade direction did not match (vs match) that suggested by the task-irrelevant gaze/arrow stimuli in the unmasked condition. However, in the masked condition, no oculomotor interference occurred for any task-irrelevant stimulus. Results enrich knowledge about boundary conditions for gaze/arrow-driven orienting using ecological attention measures.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Sinais (Psicologia)
/
Fixação Ocular
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2023
Tipo de documento:
Article