Laboratory studies of social visual cognition often simulate the critical aspects of joint attention by having participants interact with a computer-generated avatar. Recently, there has been a movement toward examining these processes during authentic social interaction. In this review, we will focus on attention to faces, attentional misdirection, and a phenomenon we have termed social inhibition of return (Social IOR), that have revealed aspects of social cognition that were hitherto unknown. We attribute these discoveries to the use of paradigms that allow for more realistic social interactions to take place. We also point to an area that has begun to attract a considerable amount of interest—that of Theory of Mind (ToM) and automatic p...
The study of social attention has in large part been constrained to studying how individuals look to...
Visual perspective taking is a fundamental feature of the human social brain. Previous research has ...
We found that the way people looked at images was influenced by their belief that others were lookin...
Laboratory studies of social visual cognition often simulate the critical aspects of joint attention...
An important mode of human social behavior is face-to-face interaction. Face-to-face interactions co...
Theory of Mind (ToM) has received significant research attention. Traditional ToM research has provi...
© 2016 Hogrefe Publishing. An important development in cognitive psychology in the past decade has b...
Social interactions are, by their nature, dynamic and reciprocal − your behaviour affects my behavio...
Human behaviour is context-dependent—based on predictions and influenced by the environment and othe...
An important development in cognitive psychology in the past decade has been the examination of visu...
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This study was partially supported by a grant of the Köln Fortune Program of the Med...
An important development in cognitive psychology in the past decade has been the examination of visu...
Cognitive neuroscientists often study social cognition by using simple but socially relevant stimuli...
Social attention, or how spatial attention is allocated to biologically relevant stimuli, has typica...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...
The study of social attention has in large part been constrained to studying how individuals look to...
Visual perspective taking is a fundamental feature of the human social brain. Previous research has ...
We found that the way people looked at images was influenced by their belief that others were lookin...
Laboratory studies of social visual cognition often simulate the critical aspects of joint attention...
An important mode of human social behavior is face-to-face interaction. Face-to-face interactions co...
Theory of Mind (ToM) has received significant research attention. Traditional ToM research has provi...
© 2016 Hogrefe Publishing. An important development in cognitive psychology in the past decade has b...
Social interactions are, by their nature, dynamic and reciprocal − your behaviour affects my behavio...
Human behaviour is context-dependent—based on predictions and influenced by the environment and othe...
An important development in cognitive psychology in the past decade has been the examination of visu...
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This study was partially supported by a grant of the Köln Fortune Program of the Med...
An important development in cognitive psychology in the past decade has been the examination of visu...
Cognitive neuroscientists often study social cognition by using simple but socially relevant stimuli...
Social attention, or how spatial attention is allocated to biologically relevant stimuli, has typica...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...
The study of social attention has in large part been constrained to studying how individuals look to...
Visual perspective taking is a fundamental feature of the human social brain. Previous research has ...
We found that the way people looked at images was influenced by their belief that others were lookin...