This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive central cues presented in a realistic environment. Realistic human-avatars initiated eye contact and then dynamically looked to the left, right or centre of a table. A moving stick served as a non-social control cue and participants localised (Experiment 1) or discriminated (Experiment 2) a contextually relevant target (teapot/teacup). The cues movement took 500 ms and stimulus onset asynchronies (SOA, 150 ms/300 ms/500 ms/1000 ms) were measured from movement initiation. Similar cuing effects were seen for the social avatar and non-social stick cue across tasks. Results showed facilitatory processes without inhibition, though there was some ...
Social cues presented at visual fixation have been shown to strongly influence an observer's attenti...
Studies investigating the effects of observing a gaze shift in another person often apply static ima...
Social cues, such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, can increase the prioritization of specific loca...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
Social cues, such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, can increase the prioritization of specific loca...
Social cues, such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, can increase the prioritization of specific loca...
Social cues, such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, can increase the prioritization of specific loca...
Previous work has revealed that social cues, such as gaze and pointed fingers, can lead to a shift i...
Social cues presented at visual fixation have been shown to strongly influence an observer's attenti...
Studies investigating the effects of observing a gaze shift in another person often apply static ima...
Social cues, such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, can increase the prioritization of specific loca...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
Social cues, such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, can increase the prioritization of specific loca...
Social cues, such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, can increase the prioritization of specific loca...
Social cues, such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, can increase the prioritization of specific loca...
Previous work has revealed that social cues, such as gaze and pointed fingers, can lead to a shift i...
Social cues presented at visual fixation have been shown to strongly influence an observer's attenti...
Studies investigating the effects of observing a gaze shift in another person often apply static ima...
Social cues, such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, can increase the prioritization of specific loca...