The cost of being watched: Stroop interference increases under concomitant eye contact |
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Authors: | Laurence Conty David Gimmig Clément Belletier Nathalie George Pascal Huguet |
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Affiliation: | 1. Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, De Crespigny Park, SE5 8AF, King''s College London, United Kingdom;2. School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom;3. Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, Addison House, Guy''s Campus, SE1 1UL, King''s College London, United Kingdom;4. Department of Experimental Psychology, OX2 6GG, University of Oxford, United Kingdom;1. Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles;2. Departments of Psychology and Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles |
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Abstract: | Current models in social neuroscience advance that eye contact may automatically recruit cognitive resources. Here, we directly tested this hypothesis by evaluating the distracting strength of eye contact on concurrent visual processing in the well-known Stroop’s paradigm. As expected, participants showed stronger Stroop interference under concomitant eye contact as compared to closed eyes. Two control experiments allowed ruling out low-level account of this effect as well as non-specific effect of the presence of open eyes. This suggests that refraining from processing eye contact is actually as difficult as refraining from word reading in the Stroop task. Crucially, the eye contact effect was obtained while gaze was not under the direct focus of attention and the participants were faced with another powerful distracter (the incongruent word) in the task at hand. Thus, there is a cost of being watched even in circumstances where the processing of direct gaze is strongly disfavored. The present results emphasize the crucial status of eye contact in human cognition. |
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