The emotional expression and gaze direction of a face are important cues for human social interactions. However, the interplay of these factors and their neural correlates are only partially understood. In the current study, we investigated ERP correlates of gaze and emotion processing following the initial presentation of faces with different emotional expressions (happy, neutral, angry) and an averted or direct gaze direction as well as following a subsequent change in gaze direction that occurred in half of the trials. We focused on the time course and scalp topography of the N170 and EPN components. The N170 amplitude was larger to averted than direct gaze for the initial face presentation and larger to gaze changes from direct to avert...
The perception of eye-gaze is thought to be a key component of our everyday social interactions. Whi...
Previous research has demonstrated an interaction between eye gaze and selected facial emotional exp...
In three experiments, we tested whether the amount of attentional resources needed to process a face...
The emotional expression and gaze direction of a face are important cues for human social interactio...
Emotional facial expressions are powerful social cues. Here we investigated how emotional expression...
The goal of the present study was to characterize the effects of valence in facial cues and object t...
Previous research has found that when gaze direction matches the underlying behavioral intent commun...
The direction in which another is looking at triggers a spontaneous orienting of attention towards g...
Direction of another person's eye gaze provides crucial information about their attention and intent...
he current study examined the interaction of fearful, angry, happy, and neutral expressions with lef...
The human brain has evolved specialised mechanisms to enable the rapid detection of threat cues, inc...
Direction of eye gaze cues spatial attention, and typically this cueing effect is not modulated by t...
The perception of another’s gaze direction and facial expression complements verbal communication an...
Multiple sources of information from the face guide attention during social interaction. The present...
Gaze plays a fundamental role in the processing of facial expressions from birth. Gaze direction is ...
The perception of eye-gaze is thought to be a key component of our everyday social interactions. Whi...
Previous research has demonstrated an interaction between eye gaze and selected facial emotional exp...
In three experiments, we tested whether the amount of attentional resources needed to process a face...
The emotional expression and gaze direction of a face are important cues for human social interactio...
Emotional facial expressions are powerful social cues. Here we investigated how emotional expression...
The goal of the present study was to characterize the effects of valence in facial cues and object t...
Previous research has found that when gaze direction matches the underlying behavioral intent commun...
The direction in which another is looking at triggers a spontaneous orienting of attention towards g...
Direction of another person's eye gaze provides crucial information about their attention and intent...
he current study examined the interaction of fearful, angry, happy, and neutral expressions with lef...
The human brain has evolved specialised mechanisms to enable the rapid detection of threat cues, inc...
Direction of eye gaze cues spatial attention, and typically this cueing effect is not modulated by t...
The perception of another’s gaze direction and facial expression complements verbal communication an...
Multiple sources of information from the face guide attention during social interaction. The present...
Gaze plays a fundamental role in the processing of facial expressions from birth. Gaze direction is ...
The perception of eye-gaze is thought to be a key component of our everyday social interactions. Whi...
Previous research has demonstrated an interaction between eye gaze and selected facial emotional exp...
In three experiments, we tested whether the amount of attentional resources needed to process a face...