The article below may contain offensive and/or incorrect content.
Seeing each other's faces—and looking into each other's eyes—are the first steps in almost all human encounters, within and across groups. This article explores the links among visual attention, visual perception, and social behavior. Study 1 uses eye tracking to document that social information such as someone being a norm violator, which produces attenuations in configural processing, also shapes how people attend to faces. Results indicate that participants avoided eye contact with deviants. Using exogenous cues to guide participants' gaze, Studies 2 and 3 reproduce the patterns of attention observed in Study 1 to assess whether attention by itself drives the impact of social information on perceptual processing. Study 2 shows that gaze patterns elicited by intentional harmdoers encourage configural processing of both intentional and unintentional harmdoers. In contrast, Study 3 shows that gaze patterns elicited by unintentional harmdoers attenuate face-typical processing of both intentional and unintentional harm-doers. Finally, Study 4 examines if gaze can change social judgments. Results demonstrate that people become more punitive when cued to attend to faces as they normally do with norm violators. In aggregate, these findings suggest that social perceptual effects are driven by attentional processes. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved)





Departments
Authors
Libraries
Current Articles
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Beauty is in the Brain of the Beholder: AI Generates Personally Attractive Images by Reading Brain Data
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: How the Brain Reads Music: The Evidence for Musical Dyslexia
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Why We’re So Bad at Daydreaming, and How to Fix It
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: What I Learned When I Recreated the Famous ‘Doll Test’ That Looked at How Black Kids See Race
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Huntington’s Disease Driven by Slowed Protein-Building Machinery in Cells
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Larger Pupils? You Might Just Have Gained Someone’s Trust
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Anti-Hyperlipidemia Drug Improves Brain Connectivity Schizophrenia
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Another Avenue to Tackling Sexually Aggressive Behavior
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: New Test Enables Rapid Detection of Mild Cognitive Impairment as Well as Dementia
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: mRNA Vaccine Developed to Treat MS-Like Condition in Mice
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: A New Potential for Functional Recovery After Spinal Cord Injury
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: A New Way to Halt Excessive Inflammation
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Vision Impairment Is Associated With Mortality
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Retinal Implants Can Give Artificial Vision to the Blind
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Large Number of COVID-19 Survivors Will Experience Cognitive Complications
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: How Does Your Brain Process Emotions? Answer Could Help Address Loneliness Epidemic
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: NIMH’s Dr. Andrea Beckel-Mitchener Named Deputy Director of NIH BRAIN Initiative
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Science News » NIMH’s Dr. Andrea Beckel-Mitchener Named Deputy Director of NIH BRAIN Initiative
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Neuroimaging Reveals How Ideology Affects Race Perception
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Quick to Smile? The Speed of Expression Offers Vital Visual Cues