The role of body orientation in the orienting and allocation of social attention was examined using an adapted Simon paradigm. Participants categorized the facial expression of forward facing, computer-generated human figures by pressing one of two response keys, each located left or right of the observers' body midline, while the orientation of the stimulus figure's body (trunk, arms, and legs), which was the task-irrelevant feature of interest, was manipulated (oriented toward the left or right visual hemifield) with respect to the spatial location of the required response. We found that when the orientation of the body was compatible with the required response location, responses were slower relative to when body orientation was incompat...
To navigate the social world, humans must represent social entities, and the relationships between t...
Recent evidence reveals that observers automatically follow the direction of another’s gaze. Here we...
People attend to where others are looking. In three sections, spanning six studies and 11 experiment...
Studies exploring reflexive joint attention report that attention is more powerfully captured by int...
Social stimuli are a highly salient source of information, and seem to possess unique qualities that...
Three experiments are reported that investigate the hypothesis that head orientation and gaze direct...
Research confirms that the body influences perception, but little is known about the embodiment of a...
Faces oriented rightwards are sometimes perceived as more dominant than faces oriented leftwards. In...
Determining where another person is attending is an important skill for social interaction that reli...
The ability to discriminate the direction of another person’s attention is an important skill in soc...
Four experiments investigate the hypothesis that cues to the direction of another's social attention...
none3siObserving averted eye gaze results in the automatic allocation of attention to the gazed-at l...
Contemporary studies of spatial and social cognition frequently use human figures as stimuli. The in...
The process through which an observer allocates his/her attention based on the attention of another ...
Considerable evidence reveals that observers automatically follow the direction of another’s gaze, w...
To navigate the social world, humans must represent social entities, and the relationships between t...
Recent evidence reveals that observers automatically follow the direction of another’s gaze. Here we...
People attend to where others are looking. In three sections, spanning six studies and 11 experiment...
Studies exploring reflexive joint attention report that attention is more powerfully captured by int...
Social stimuli are a highly salient source of information, and seem to possess unique qualities that...
Three experiments are reported that investigate the hypothesis that head orientation and gaze direct...
Research confirms that the body influences perception, but little is known about the embodiment of a...
Faces oriented rightwards are sometimes perceived as more dominant than faces oriented leftwards. In...
Determining where another person is attending is an important skill for social interaction that reli...
The ability to discriminate the direction of another person’s attention is an important skill in soc...
Four experiments investigate the hypothesis that cues to the direction of another's social attention...
none3siObserving averted eye gaze results in the automatic allocation of attention to the gazed-at l...
Contemporary studies of spatial and social cognition frequently use human figures as stimuli. The in...
The process through which an observer allocates his/her attention based on the attention of another ...
Considerable evidence reveals that observers automatically follow the direction of another’s gaze, w...
To navigate the social world, humans must represent social entities, and the relationships between t...
Recent evidence reveals that observers automatically follow the direction of another’s gaze. Here we...
People attend to where others are looking. In three sections, spanning six studies and 11 experiment...