Studying the influence of race on the gaze cueing effect using eye tracking method
The gaze direction of another person is an important social cue, allowing us to orient quickly in social interactions. The effect of short-term redirection of visual attention to the same object that other people are looking at is known as the gaze cueing effect. There is evidence that the strength...
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Lomonosov Moscow State University
2017-06-01
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doaj-bf955545425b4439b794ca0f133e70cd2020-11-24T23:10:19ZrusLomonosov Moscow State UniversityNacionalʹnyj Psihologičeskij Žurnal2079-66172309-98282017-06-01226465810.11621/npj.2017.0206Studying the influence of race on the gaze cueing effect using eye tracking methodGalina Ya. Menshikova0Artyom I. Kovalev1Elizaveta G. Luniakova2Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, RussiaLomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, RussiaLomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, RussiaThe gaze direction of another person is an important social cue, allowing us to orient quickly in social interactions. The effect of short-term redirection of visual attention to the same object that other people are looking at is known as the gaze cueing effect. There is evidence that the strength of this effect depends on many social factors, such as the trust in a partner, her/his gender, social attitudes, etc. In our study we investigated the influence of race of face stimuli on the strength of the gaze cueing effect. Using the modified Posner Cueing Task an attentional shift was assessed in a scene where avatar faces of different race were used as distractors. Participants were instructed to fix the black dot in the centre of the screen until it changes colour, and then as soon as possible to make a rightward or leftward saccade, depending on colour of a fixed point. A male distractor face was shown in the centre of the screen simultaneously with a fixed point. The gaze direction of the distractor face changed from straight ahead to rightward or leftward at the moment when colour of a fixed point changed. It could be either congruent or incongruent with the saccade direction. We used face distractors of three race categories: Caucasian (own race faces), Asian and African (other race faces). Twenty five Caucasian participants took part in our study. The results showed that the race of face distractors influence the strength of the gaze cueing effect, that manifested in the change of latency and velocity of the ongoing saccades.http://npsyj.ru/pdf/npj-no26-2017/national_2017_2_6.pdfsaccadic latencyeye movementsgaze-cueing effectown-race effectsocial attentionface perception |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
Russian |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Galina Ya. Menshikova Artyom I. Kovalev Elizaveta G. Luniakova |
spellingShingle |
Galina Ya. Menshikova Artyom I. Kovalev Elizaveta G. Luniakova Studying the influence of race on the gaze cueing effect using eye tracking method Nacionalʹnyj Psihologičeskij Žurnal saccadic latency eye movements gaze-cueing effect own-race effect social attention face perception |
author_facet |
Galina Ya. Menshikova Artyom I. Kovalev Elizaveta G. Luniakova |
author_sort |
Galina Ya. Menshikova |
title |
Studying the influence of race on the gaze cueing effect using eye tracking method |
title_short |
Studying the influence of race on the gaze cueing effect using eye tracking method |
title_full |
Studying the influence of race on the gaze cueing effect using eye tracking method |
title_fullStr |
Studying the influence of race on the gaze cueing effect using eye tracking method |
title_full_unstemmed |
Studying the influence of race on the gaze cueing effect using eye tracking method |
title_sort |
studying the influence of race on the gaze cueing effect using eye tracking method |
publisher |
Lomonosov Moscow State University |
series |
Nacionalʹnyj Psihologičeskij Žurnal |
issn |
2079-6617 2309-9828 |
publishDate |
2017-06-01 |
description |
The gaze direction of another person is an important social cue, allowing us to orient quickly in social interactions. The effect of short-term redirection of visual attention to the same object that other people are looking at is known as the gaze cueing effect. There is evidence that the strength of this effect depends on many
social factors, such as the trust in a partner, her/his gender, social attitudes, etc. In our study we investigated the influence of race of face stimuli on the strength of the gaze cueing effect. Using the modified Posner Cueing Task an attentional shift was assessed in a scene where avatar faces of different race were used as distractors. Participants were instructed to fix the black dot in the centre of the screen until it changes colour, and then as soon as possible to make a rightward or leftward saccade, depending on
colour of a fixed point. A male distractor face was shown in the centre of the screen simultaneously with a fixed point. The gaze direction of the distractor face changed from straight ahead to rightward or leftward at the moment when colour of a fixed point changed. It could be either congruent or incongruent with the saccade direction. We used face distractors of three race categories: Caucasian (own race faces), Asian and African (other race faces). Twenty five Caucasian participants took part in our study. The results showed that the race of face distractors influence the strength of the gaze cueing effect, that manifested in the change of latency and velocity of the ongoing
saccades. |
topic |
saccadic latency eye movements gaze-cueing effect own-race effect social attention face perception |
url |
http://npsyj.ru/pdf/npj-no26-2017/national_2017_2_6.pdf |
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