International audienceThe importance of social context in affecting attention has recently been highlighted by the finding that the presence of a passive, nonevaluative confederate can improve selective attention. The underlying mechanism, however, remains unclear. In this paper, we argue that social facilitation can be caused by distractor inhibition. Two distinct sources of evidence are provided from an experiment employing the Stoop task with and without social presence. First, analysis of the response time (RT) distribution indicates that interference is reduced at relatively long RTs. This is consistent with an inhibitory mechanism, whose effects build up slowly. Further support is provided by showing that social facilitation is preven...
For the good and the bad, the world around us is full of distraction. In particular, onset stimuli t...
Head and gaze directions are used during social interactions as essential cues to infer where someon...
The presence of another person, even if implied, has been shown to affect various social behaviours....
International audienceThe importance of social context in affecting attention has recently been high...
The presence of a 'naive' confederate can reduce the Stroop interference shown by participants (Hugu...
Two studies investigated boundary conditions of an effect of social presence on the Stroop task and ...
Five experimental studies of social facilitation are reported. These were conducted as part of a pro...
Most tasks we carry out every day are performed in a social setting be they at work, school, with fr...
International audienceCurrent models in social neuroscience advance that eye contact may automatical...
International audience"Social facilitation" refers to the enhancement or impairment of performance e...
There is a growing consensus among researchers that a complete description of human attention and ac...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
Research on sustained attention regularly reports declines in task performance as a function of time...
When two individuals alternate reaching responses to targets located in a visual display, reaction t...
Social facilitation is the oldest experimental concept in social psychology. Throughout decades of s...
For the good and the bad, the world around us is full of distraction. In particular, onset stimuli t...
Head and gaze directions are used during social interactions as essential cues to infer where someon...
The presence of another person, even if implied, has been shown to affect various social behaviours....
International audienceThe importance of social context in affecting attention has recently been high...
The presence of a 'naive' confederate can reduce the Stroop interference shown by participants (Hugu...
Two studies investigated boundary conditions of an effect of social presence on the Stroop task and ...
Five experimental studies of social facilitation are reported. These were conducted as part of a pro...
Most tasks we carry out every day are performed in a social setting be they at work, school, with fr...
International audienceCurrent models in social neuroscience advance that eye contact may automatical...
International audience"Social facilitation" refers to the enhancement or impairment of performance e...
There is a growing consensus among researchers that a complete description of human attention and ac...
This study aimed to investigate the facilitatory versus inhibitory effects of dynamic non-predictive...
Research on sustained attention regularly reports declines in task performance as a function of time...
When two individuals alternate reaching responses to targets located in a visual display, reaction t...
Social facilitation is the oldest experimental concept in social psychology. Throughout decades of s...
For the good and the bad, the world around us is full of distraction. In particular, onset stimuli t...
Head and gaze directions are used during social interactions as essential cues to infer where someon...
The presence of another person, even if implied, has been shown to affect various social behaviours....