We respond more quickly to our own face than to other faces, but there is debate over whether this is connected to attention-grabbing properties of the self-face. In two experiments, we investigate whether the self-face selectively captures attention, and the attentional conditions under which this might occur. In both experiments, we examined whether different types of face (self, friend, stranger) provide differential levels of distraction when processing self, friend and stranger names. In Experiment 1, an image of a distractor face appeared centrally – inside the focus of attention – behind a target name, with the faces either upright or inverted. In Experiment 2, distractor faces appeared peripherally – outside the focus of attention –...
Previous studies investigating the ability of high priority stimuli to grab attention reached contra...
Earlier work on self-face processing has reported a bias in the processing of self-face result in fa...
The implicit self-recognition process may take place already in the pre-attentive stages of percepti...
We respond more quickly to our own face than to other faces, but there is debate over whether this i...
We respond more quickly to our own face than to other faces, but there is debate over whether this i...
We respond more quickly to our own face than to other faces, but there is debate over whether this i...
We respond more quickly to our own face than to other faces, but there is debate over whether this i...
Previous studies that investigated the ability of high priority stimuli to grab attention reported c...
Auto-referential materials (i.e., the own name) have been described as particularly prone to capture...
One's own face possesses two properties that make it prone to grab attention: It is a face, and, in ...
Previous studies investigating the ability of high priority stimuli to grab attention reached contr...
Auto-referential materials (own name) have been described as particularly prone to capture attention...
It has been shown previously that some categories of stimuli are more likely to capture attention un...
Previous studies investigating the ability of high priority stimuli to grab attention reached contra...
Selective attention is widely regarded as a crucial component of human perception. In the visual do...
Previous studies investigating the ability of high priority stimuli to grab attention reached contra...
Earlier work on self-face processing has reported a bias in the processing of self-face result in fa...
The implicit self-recognition process may take place already in the pre-attentive stages of percepti...
We respond more quickly to our own face than to other faces, but there is debate over whether this i...
We respond more quickly to our own face than to other faces, but there is debate over whether this i...
We respond more quickly to our own face than to other faces, but there is debate over whether this i...
We respond more quickly to our own face than to other faces, but there is debate over whether this i...
Previous studies that investigated the ability of high priority stimuli to grab attention reported c...
Auto-referential materials (i.e., the own name) have been described as particularly prone to capture...
One's own face possesses two properties that make it prone to grab attention: It is a face, and, in ...
Previous studies investigating the ability of high priority stimuli to grab attention reached contr...
Auto-referential materials (own name) have been described as particularly prone to capture attention...
It has been shown previously that some categories of stimuli are more likely to capture attention un...
Previous studies investigating the ability of high priority stimuli to grab attention reached contra...
Selective attention is widely regarded as a crucial component of human perception. In the visual do...
Previous studies investigating the ability of high priority stimuli to grab attention reached contra...
Earlier work on self-face processing has reported a bias in the processing of self-face result in fa...
The implicit self-recognition process may take place already in the pre-attentive stages of percepti...