Studies exploring reflexive joint attention report that attention is more powerfully captured by interfering social signals (such as others' gaze or hand orientation) than by non-biological directional cues (such as an arrow). However, what remains unknown is whether these effects are mapped in purely spatial or in body-part specific reference frames. Changes of a central, black fixation point into blue or orange were the imperative instruction signal for the experimental subjects to make a leftward or a rightward movement (saccades in Study 1 and hand pointing in Study 2) while ignoring distracting stimuli (leftward or rightward oriented gaze, hand pointing or arrow). Gaze and pointing hand distracters that were directionally incongruent w...
Research confirms that the body influences perception, but little is known about the embodiment of a...
Efficiently judging where someone else is looking is important for social interactions, allowing us ...
Social cues, such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, can increase the prioritization of specific loca...
Behavioral studies indicate that directional gaze and hand pointing are fundamental social signals t...
People attend to where others are looking. In three sections, spanning six studies and 11 experiment...
Considerable evidence reveals that observers automatically follow the direction of another’s gaze, w...
Recent evidence reveals that observers automatically follow the direction of another’s gaze. Here we...
Social stimuli are a highly salient source of information, and seem to possess unique qualities that...
The ability to discriminate the direction of another person’s attention is an important skill in soc...
In highly social groups like human and non-human primates, gaze and pointing cues are fundamentally ...
Social attention is crucial for efficient social interactions and adaptive functioning in humans. Ho...
Four experiments investigate the hypothesis that cues to the direction of another's social attention...
The role of body orientation in the orienting and allocation of social attention was examined using ...
Social attention is crucial for efficient social interactions and adaptive functioning in humans. Ho...
Despite considerable interest in both action perception and social attention over the last 2 decades...
Research confirms that the body influences perception, but little is known about the embodiment of a...
Efficiently judging where someone else is looking is important for social interactions, allowing us ...
Social cues, such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, can increase the prioritization of specific loca...
Behavioral studies indicate that directional gaze and hand pointing are fundamental social signals t...
People attend to where others are looking. In three sections, spanning six studies and 11 experiment...
Considerable evidence reveals that observers automatically follow the direction of another’s gaze, w...
Recent evidence reveals that observers automatically follow the direction of another’s gaze. Here we...
Social stimuli are a highly salient source of information, and seem to possess unique qualities that...
The ability to discriminate the direction of another person’s attention is an important skill in soc...
In highly social groups like human and non-human primates, gaze and pointing cues are fundamentally ...
Social attention is crucial for efficient social interactions and adaptive functioning in humans. Ho...
Four experiments investigate the hypothesis that cues to the direction of another's social attention...
The role of body orientation in the orienting and allocation of social attention was examined using ...
Social attention is crucial for efficient social interactions and adaptive functioning in humans. Ho...
Despite considerable interest in both action perception and social attention over the last 2 decades...
Research confirms that the body influences perception, but little is known about the embodiment of a...
Efficiently judging where someone else is looking is important for social interactions, allowing us ...
Social cues, such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, can increase the prioritization of specific loca...