首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Gaze cueing elicited by emotional faces is influenced by affective context
Authors:Andrew P Bayliss  Stefanie Schuch  Steven P Tipper
Institution:1. School of Psychology , University of Queensland , St. Lucia, Australia a.bayliss@uq.edu.au;3. Institut für Psychologie , RWTH Aachen University , Aachen, Germany;4. School of Psychology , Bangor University , Bangor, UK
Abstract:When we observe someone shift their gaze to a peripheral event or object, a corresponding shift in our own attention often follows. This social orienting response, joint attention, has been studied in the laboratory using the gaze cueing paradigm. Here, we investigate the combined influence of the emotional content displayed in two critical components of a joint attention episode: The facial expression of the cue face, and the affective nature of the to-be-localized target object. Hence, we presented participants with happy and disgusted faces as cueing stimuli, and neutral (Experiment 1), pleasant and unpleasant (Experiment 2) pictures as target stimuli. The findings demonstrate an effect of ‘emotional context’ confined to participants viewing pleasant pictures. Specifically, gaze cueing was boosted when the emotion of the gazing face (i.e., happy) matched that of the targets (pleasant). Demonstrating modulation by emotional context highlights the vital flexibility that a successful joint attention system requires in order to assist our navigation of the social world.
Keywords:Attention  Emotion  Eye gaze  Facial expression
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号