Violence reduces attention to faces and draws attention to points of contact

被引:0
|
作者
Coltan Scrivner
Kyoung Whan Choe
Joseph Henry
Muxuan Lyu
Dario Maestripieri
Marc G. Berman
机构
[1] The University of Chicago,Department of Comparative Human Development
[2] The University of Chicago,Institute for Mind and Biology
[3] The University of Chicago,Department of Psychology
[4] The University of Chicago,Mansueto Institute for Urban Innovation
[5] Grossman Institute for Neuroscience,undefined
[6] Quantitative Biology,undefined
[7] and Human Behavior,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Although violence is a frequently researched topic, little is known about how different social features influence information gathering from violent interactions. Regions of an interaction that provide contextual information should receive more attention. We predicted the most informative features of a violent social interaction would be faces, points of contact, and objects being held. To test this, we tracked the eyes of 90 participants as they viewed images of social interactions that varied with respect to violence. When viewing violent interactions, participants attended significantly less to faces and significantly more to points of contact. Moreover, first-fixation analysis suggests that some of these biases are present from the beginning of scene-viewing. These findings are the first to demonstrate the visual relevance of faces and contact points in gathering information from violent social interactions. These results also question the attentional dominance of faces in active social scenes, highlighting the importance of using a variety of stimuli and contexts in social cognition research.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Violence reduces attention to faces and draws attention to points of contact
    Scrivner, Coltan
    Choe, Kyoung Whan
    Henry, Joseph
    Lyu, Muxuan
    Maestripieri, Dario
    Berman, Marc G.
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2019, 9 (1)
  • [2] MUSIC DRAWS ATTENTION TO THE LEFT AND SPEECH DRAWS ATTENTION TO THE RIGHT
    SEGALOWITZ, SJ
    PLANTERY, P
    [J]. BRAIN AND COGNITION, 1985, 4 (01) : 1 - 6
  • [3] STOCK DIVERSIFICATION DRAWS ATTENTION
    TANIMURA, H
    [J]. BUSINESS JAPAN, 1977, 22 (03): : 87 - 87
  • [4] PIONEER TRUCK FLEET DRAWS ATTENTION
    不详
    [J]. MANAGEMENT OF WORLD WASTES, 1983, 26 (06): : 34 - &
  • [5] TOOTHLESS GEAR DRAWS MEDIA ATTENTION
    MCFARLAND, RS
    [J]. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING, 1982, 104 (01): : 60 - 60
  • [6] INDIGENT CARE PROBLEM DRAWS ATTENTION
    FINN, J
    [J]. HOSPITALS, 1984, 58 (08): : 31 - 31
  • [7] RADIATION THREAT DRAWS ATTENTION, TOO
    WALLER, L
    [J]. ELECTRONICS-US, 1981, 54 (10): : 42 - 42
  • [8] Misconduct ruling draws media attention
    不详
    [J]. CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS, 1999, 77 (31) : 19 - 19
  • [9] Faces Demanding Attention
    Brilliant, Richard
    [J]. GESTA-INTERNATIONAL CENTER OF MEDIEVAL ART, 2007, 46 (02): : 91 - 99
  • [10] Faces retain attention
    Bindemann, M
    Burton, AM
    Hooge, ITC
    Jenkins, R
    De Haan, EHF
    [J]. PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2005, 12 (06) : 1048 - 1053