Attentional Capture by Change in Direct Gaze
2011; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 40; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1068/p7003
ISSN1468-4233
AutoresTakemasa Yokoyama, Kazuya Ishibashi, Yuki Hongoh, Shinichi Kita,
Tópico(s)Visual perception and processing mechanisms
ResumoIn three experiments, we examined whether change in direct gaze was better at capturing visuospatial attention than non-direct gaze change. Also, change in direct gaze can be categorised into two types: ‘look toward’, which means gaze changing to look toward observers, and ‘look away’, which means gaze changing to look away from observers. Thus, we also investigated which type of change in direct gaze was more effective in capturing visuospatial attention. Each experiment employed a change-detection task, and we compared detection accuracy between ‘look away’, ‘look toward’, and non-direct gaze-change conditions. In experiment 1, we found detection advantage for change in direct gaze relative to non-direct gaze change, and for ‘look toward’ compared with ‘look away’. In experiment 2, we conducted control experiments to exclude possibilities of simple motion detection and geometrical factors of eyes, and confirm detection advantage in experiment 1 only occurred when the stimuli were processed as faces and gazes. In experiment 3, we manipulated the head deviation, but the results in experiment 1 persisted despite changes in head orientation. The findings establish that individuals are sensitive to change in direct relative to non-direct gaze change, and ‘look toward’ compared with ‘look away’.
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