When someone is watching you, you may change your behaviour in various ways: this is called the ‘audience effect’. Social behaviours such as acting prosocially or changing gaze patterns may be used as signals of reputation and thus may be particularly prone to audience effects. The present paper aims to test the relationship between prosocial choices, gaze patterns and the feeling of being watched within a novel ecologically valid paradigm, where participants communicate with a video-clip of a confederate and believe she is (or is not) a live feed of a confederate who can see them back. Results show that when participants believe they are watched, they tend to make more prosocial choices and they gaze less to the confederate. We also find t...
Social stimuli are known to both attract and direct our attention, but most research on social atten...
In this review, we ask how looking at people’s faces can influence prosocial behaviors toward them. ...
In this review, we ask how looking at people’s faces can influence prosocial behaviors toward them. ...
Social interactions are characterised by exchanges of a variety of social signals to communicate wit...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...
Some evidence suggests that people behave more cooperatively and generously when observed or in the ...
Social interactions involve complex exchanges of a variety of social signals, such as gaze, facial e...
Experimental psychologists frequently present participants with social stimuli (i.e. videos or pictu...
Social understanding is facilitated by effectively attending to other people and the subtle social c...
Social stimuli are known to both attract and direct our attention, but most research on social atten...
Abstract Humans typically exhibit a tendency to follow the gaze of conspecifics, a social attention ...
Social stimuli are known to both attract and direct our attention, but most research on social atten...
Social stimuli are known to both attract and direct our attention, but most research on social atten...
In this review, we ask how looking at people’s faces can influence prosocial behaviors toward them. ...
In this review, we ask how looking at people’s faces can influence prosocial behaviors toward them. ...
Social interactions are characterised by exchanges of a variety of social signals to communicate wit...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...
Researchers have increasingly focused on how the potential for social interaction modulates basic pr...
Some evidence suggests that people behave more cooperatively and generously when observed or in the ...
Social interactions involve complex exchanges of a variety of social signals, such as gaze, facial e...
Experimental psychologists frequently present participants with social stimuli (i.e. videos or pictu...
Social understanding is facilitated by effectively attending to other people and the subtle social c...
Social stimuli are known to both attract and direct our attention, but most research on social atten...
Abstract Humans typically exhibit a tendency to follow the gaze of conspecifics, a social attention ...
Social stimuli are known to both attract and direct our attention, but most research on social atten...
Social stimuli are known to both attract and direct our attention, but most research on social atten...
In this review, we ask how looking at people’s faces can influence prosocial behaviors toward them. ...
In this review, we ask how looking at people’s faces can influence prosocial behaviors toward them. ...