Social attention is crucial for efficient social interactions and adaptive functioning in humans. However, whether this indispensable ability is unique and qualitatively distinct from non-social attention remains equivocal. Using the visual adaptation technique in conjunction with a modified central cueing paradigm, the current study investigated the specificity of social attention. Results revealed that adaptation to the walking direction of biological motion (BM) affected the reflexive attentional effect triggered by subsequent BM cues. Critically, pre-exposure to another type of social cues (i.e., eye gaze) could produce a similar aftereffect on attentional orienting elicited by BM, reflecting that social attention induced by different t...
Saliency-based models of visual attention postulate that, when a scene is freely viewed, attention i...
The present review examines the neural-behavioral correlates of human social attention, with special...
The human face is the most important stimulus for human social interactions. Recent research showed ...
Social attention is crucial for efficient social interactions and adaptive functioning in humans. Ho...
Previous research has demonstrated that biological motion (BM) cues can induce reflexive attentional...
Here, we report a novel social orienting response that occurs after viewing averted gaze. We show, i...
Four experiments investigate the hypothesis that cues to the direction of another's social attention...
Abstract & This study examines whether orienting attention to biologically based social cues eng...
Previous evidence suggests that directional social cues (e.g., eye gaze) cause automatic shifts in a...
The reflexive orienting response triggered by nonpredictive gaze cues is thought to be driven by a d...
During social interactions, the ability to detect and respond to gaze-based joint attention bids oft...
It is well known that perceived eye gaze direction influences attentional orienting. However, it sti...
While it is known that primitive, low-level visual stimuli such as abrupt visual onsets or luminance...
People attend to where others are looking. In three sections, spanning six studies and 11 experiment...
While it is known that primitive, low-level visual stimuli such as abrupt visual onsets or luminance...
Saliency-based models of visual attention postulate that, when a scene is freely viewed, attention i...
The present review examines the neural-behavioral correlates of human social attention, with special...
The human face is the most important stimulus for human social interactions. Recent research showed ...
Social attention is crucial for efficient social interactions and adaptive functioning in humans. Ho...
Previous research has demonstrated that biological motion (BM) cues can induce reflexive attentional...
Here, we report a novel social orienting response that occurs after viewing averted gaze. We show, i...
Four experiments investigate the hypothesis that cues to the direction of another's social attention...
Abstract & This study examines whether orienting attention to biologically based social cues eng...
Previous evidence suggests that directional social cues (e.g., eye gaze) cause automatic shifts in a...
The reflexive orienting response triggered by nonpredictive gaze cues is thought to be driven by a d...
During social interactions, the ability to detect and respond to gaze-based joint attention bids oft...
It is well known that perceived eye gaze direction influences attentional orienting. However, it sti...
While it is known that primitive, low-level visual stimuli such as abrupt visual onsets or luminance...
People attend to where others are looking. In three sections, spanning six studies and 11 experiment...
While it is known that primitive, low-level visual stimuli such as abrupt visual onsets or luminance...
Saliency-based models of visual attention postulate that, when a scene is freely viewed, attention i...
The present review examines the neural-behavioral correlates of human social attention, with special...
The human face is the most important stimulus for human social interactions. Recent research showed ...