We present novel data on the role of attention in eliciting enhanced processing of stimuli associated with self. Participants were required to make pro- or anti-saccades according to whether learned shape-label pairings matched or mismatched. When stimuli matched participants were required to make an anti-saccade, and when the stimuli mismatched a pro-saccade was required. We found that anti-saccades were difficult to make to stimuli associated with self when compared to stimuli associated with a friend and a stranger. In contrast, anti-saccades to friend-stimuli were easier to make than anti-saccades to stranger-stimuli. In addition, a correct anti-saccade to a self-associated stimulus disrupted subsequent pro-saccade trials, relative to w...
AbstractA study is reported in which eye movements were recorded when observers attempted to make a ...
AbstractAccurate saccadic programming in natural visual scenes requires a signal designating which o...
We report two experiments showing that dynamically orienting our own face facilitates the automatic ...
We present novel data on the role of attention in eliciting enhanced processing of stimuli associate...
Human faces capture attention more than other visual stimuli. Here we investigated whether such face...
The implicit self-recognition process may take place already in the pre-attentive stages of percepti...
In psychology, self-representation is widely held to guide our cognition and action. Self-relevant s...
Attentional control over prepotent responses has previously been shown by manipulating the probabili...
Eye movements bring new information into our visual system. The selection of each fixation is the re...
Considerable efforts have focused on elucidating the influence that self-relevance exerts on percept...
When cues in the environment are associated with self (e.g., one’s own name, face, or coffee cup), t...
We interact with complex scenes using eye movements to select targets of interest. Studies have show...
Earlier work has demonstrated that attention is indirectly cognitively malleable by processes of sel...
The self bias effect refers to the prioritised processing of self-related information (i.e. faster ...
AbstractA distractor placed nearby a saccade target will cause interference during saccade planning ...
AbstractA study is reported in which eye movements were recorded when observers attempted to make a ...
AbstractAccurate saccadic programming in natural visual scenes requires a signal designating which o...
We report two experiments showing that dynamically orienting our own face facilitates the automatic ...
We present novel data on the role of attention in eliciting enhanced processing of stimuli associate...
Human faces capture attention more than other visual stimuli. Here we investigated whether such face...
The implicit self-recognition process may take place already in the pre-attentive stages of percepti...
In psychology, self-representation is widely held to guide our cognition and action. Self-relevant s...
Attentional control over prepotent responses has previously been shown by manipulating the probabili...
Eye movements bring new information into our visual system. The selection of each fixation is the re...
Considerable efforts have focused on elucidating the influence that self-relevance exerts on percept...
When cues in the environment are associated with self (e.g., one’s own name, face, or coffee cup), t...
We interact with complex scenes using eye movements to select targets of interest. Studies have show...
Earlier work has demonstrated that attention is indirectly cognitively malleable by processes of sel...
The self bias effect refers to the prioritised processing of self-related information (i.e. faster ...
AbstractA distractor placed nearby a saccade target will cause interference during saccade planning ...
AbstractA study is reported in which eye movements were recorded when observers attempted to make a ...
AbstractAccurate saccadic programming in natural visual scenes requires a signal designating which o...
We report two experiments showing that dynamically orienting our own face facilitates the automatic ...