Straight gaze facilitates face processing but does not cause involuntary attentional capture |
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Authors: | D. Framorando N. George D. Kerzel N. Burra |
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Affiliation: | 1. Faculté de Psychologie et des Sciences de l’Education, Université de Genève, Geneva, Switzerland;2. Inserm, Paris, France;3. CNRS, Paris, France;4. Sorbonne Universités, Paris, France;5. Institut du Cerveau et de la Moelle Epinière (ICM), Social and Affective Neuroscience Lab and MEG-EEG Centre - CENIR, Paris, France |
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Abstract: | This study aimed to investigate the conditions under which eyes with a straight gaze capture attention more than eyes with an averted gaze, a phenomenon called the stare-in-the-crowd effect. In Experiment 1, we measured attentional capture by distractor faces with either straight or averted gaze that were shown among faces with closed eyes. Gaze direction of the distractor face was irrelevant because participants searched for a tilted face and indicated its gender. The presence of the distractor face with open eyes resulted in slower reaction times, but gaze direction had no effect, suggesting that straight gaze does not result in more involuntary attentional capture than averted gaze. In three further experiments with the same stimuli, the gaze direction of the target, and not the distractor, was varied. Better performance with straight than averted gaze of the target face was observed when the gaze direction or gender of the target face had to be discriminated. However, no difference between straight and averted was observed when only the presence of a face with open eyes had to be detected. Thus, the stare-in-the crowd effect is only observed when eye gaze is selected as part of the target and only when features of the face have to be discriminated. Our findings suggest that preference for straight gaze bears on target-related processes rather than on attentional capture per se. |
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Keywords: | Straight gaze visual search attention selection gaze contact attention capture |
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