Visual search for facing and non-facing people: The effect of actor inversion

被引:27
作者
Vestner, Tim [1 ]
Gray, Katie L. H. [2 ]
Cook, Richard [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Birkbeck Univ London, Dept Psychol Sci, London, England
[2] Univ Reading, Sch Psychol & Clin Language Sci, Reading, Berks, England
[3] Univ York, Dept Psychol, York, N Yorkshire, England
基金
欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
Social perception; Social interactions; Visual search; Attentional cueing; Inversion effects;
D O I
10.1016/j.cognition.2020.104550
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
In recent years, there has been growing interest in how human observers perceive, attend to, and recall, social interactions viewed from third-person perspectives. One of the interesting findings to emerge from this new literature is the search advantage for facing dyads. When hidden amongst pairs of individuals facing in the same direction, pairs of individuals arranged front-to-front are found faster in visual search tasks than pairs of individuals arranged back-to-back. Interestingly, the search advantage for facing dyads appears to be sensitive to the orientation of the people depicted. While front-to-front target pairs are found faster than back-to-back targets when target and distractor pairings are shown upright, front-to-front and back-to-back targets are found equally quickly when pairings are shown upside-down. In the present study, we sought to better understand why the search advantage for facing dyads is sensitive to the orientation of the people depicted. To begin, we show that the orientation sensitivity of the search advantage is seen with dyads constructed from faces only, and from bodies with the head and face occluded. We replicate these effects using two different visual search paradigms. We go on to show that individual faces and bodies, viewed in profile, produce strong attentional cueing effects when shown upright, but not when presented upside-down. Together with recent evidence that arrows arranged front-to-front also produce the search advantage for facing dyads, these findings support the view that the search advantage is a by-product of the ability of constituent elements to direct observers' visuo-spatial attention.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 42 条
[1]   The Representation of Two-Body Shapes in the Human Visual Cortex [J].
Abassi, Etienne ;
Papeo, Liuba .
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2020, 40 (04) :852-863
[2]   A look at how we look at others: Orientation inversion and photographic negation disrupt the perception of human bodies [J].
Cook, Richard ;
Duchaine, Bradley .
VISUAL COGNITION, 2011, 19 (04) :445-468
[3]   Evaluating Amazon's Mechanical Turk as a Tool for Experimental Behavioral Research [J].
Crump, Matthew J. C. ;
McDonnell, John V. ;
Gureckis, Todd M. .
PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (03)
[4]   Bodies capture attention when nothing is expected [J].
Downing, PE ;
Bray, D ;
Rogers, J ;
Childs, C .
COGNITION, 2004, 93 (01) :B27-B38
[5]   A Revised Neural Framework for Face Processing [J].
Duchaine, Brad ;
Yovel, Galit .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF VISION SCIENCE, VOL 1, 2015, 1 :393-416
[6]   What is "special" about face perception? [J].
Farah, MJ ;
Wilson, KD ;
Drain, M ;
Tanaka, JN .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1998, 105 (03) :482-498
[7]   Face Processing Systems: From Neurons to Real-World Social Perception [J].
Freiwald, Winrich ;
Duchaine, Bradley ;
Yovel, Galit .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF NEUROSCIENCE, VOL 39, 2016, 39 :325-346
[8]   Gaze cueing of attention: Visual attention, social cognition, and individual differences [J].
Frischen, Alexandra ;
Bayliss, Andrew P. ;
Tipper, Steven P. .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 2007, 133 (04) :694-724
[9]   Is the Web as good as the lab? Comparable performance from Web and lab in cognitive/perceptual experiments [J].
Germine, Laura ;
Nakayama, Ken ;
Duchaine, Bradley C. ;
Chabris, Christopher F. ;
Chatterjee, Garga ;
Wilmer, Jeremy B. .
PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2012, 19 (05) :847-857
[10]   Are the facial gender and facial age variants of the composite face illusion products of a common mechanism? [J].
Gray, Katie L. H. ;
Guillemin, Yvonne ;
Cenac, Zarus ;
Gibbons, Sophie ;
Vestner, Tim ;
Cook, Richard .
PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2020, 27 (01) :62-69