We found that the way people looked at images was influenced by their belief that others were looking too. If participants believed that an unseen other person was also looking at what they could see, it shifted the balance of their gaze between negative and positive images. The direction of this shift depended upon whether participants thought that later they would be compared against the other person or would be collaborating with them. Changes in the social context influenced both gaze and memory processes, and were not due just to participants' belief that they are looking at the same images, but also to the belief that they are doing the same task. We believe that the phenomenon of joint perception reveals the pervasive and subtle effe...
Social gaze provides a window into the interests and intentions of others and allows us to actively ...
Previous research suggests that closing one’s eyes or averting one’s gaze from another person can be...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...
We found that the way people looked at images was influenced by their belief that others were lookin...
The way that we look at images is influenced by social context. Previously we demonstrated this phen...
Abstract We document a new phenomenon: participants' eye movements are influenced by the belief...
We found that the way people looked at images was influenced by their belief that others were lookin...
Efficiently judging where someone else is looking is important for social interactions, allowing us ...
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This study was partially supported by a grant of the Köln Fortune Program of the Med...
Research on joint attention has addressed both the effects of gaze following and the ability to shar...
When two people look at the same object in the environment and are aware of each other’s attentional...
Abstract Jointly attending to a shared referent with other people is a social attention behaviour t...
Attending where others gaze is one of the most fundamental mechanisms of social cognition. The prese...
People communicate using verbal and non-verbal cues, including gaze cues. Gaze allocation can be inf...
Laboratory studies of social visual cognition often simulate the critical aspects of joint attention...
Social gaze provides a window into the interests and intentions of others and allows us to actively ...
Previous research suggests that closing one’s eyes or averting one’s gaze from another person can be...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...
We found that the way people looked at images was influenced by their belief that others were lookin...
The way that we look at images is influenced by social context. Previously we demonstrated this phen...
Abstract We document a new phenomenon: participants' eye movements are influenced by the belief...
We found that the way people looked at images was influenced by their belief that others were lookin...
Efficiently judging where someone else is looking is important for social interactions, allowing us ...
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This study was partially supported by a grant of the Köln Fortune Program of the Med...
Research on joint attention has addressed both the effects of gaze following and the ability to shar...
When two people look at the same object in the environment and are aware of each other’s attentional...
Abstract Jointly attending to a shared referent with other people is a social attention behaviour t...
Attending where others gaze is one of the most fundamental mechanisms of social cognition. The prese...
People communicate using verbal and non-verbal cues, including gaze cues. Gaze allocation can be inf...
Laboratory studies of social visual cognition often simulate the critical aspects of joint attention...
Social gaze provides a window into the interests and intentions of others and allows us to actively ...
Previous research suggests that closing one’s eyes or averting one’s gaze from another person can be...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...