4.4 Article

What gaze adds to arrows: Changes in attentional response to gaze versus arrows in childhood and adolescence

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 113, Issue 3, Pages 718-738

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bjop.12552

Keywords

attentional orienting; development; gaze following; social attention; socio-cognitive development; spatial congruency effect

Funding

  1. FPU [fpu16/07124]

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Gaze, as a cue, allows us to infer social partners' interests, behaviors, thoughts, and emotions. Although it shares attentional properties with other directional stimuli, gaze produces unique effects. The developmental trajectory of these gaze-specific attentional mechanisms shows a shift from arrow-like effects to a unique reversed congruency effect (RCE), indicating the additional attentional properties of gaze.
From early ages, gaze acts as a cue to infer the interests, behaviours, thoughts and emotions of social partners. Despite sharing attentional properties with other non-social directional stimuli, such as arrows, gaze produces unique effects. A spatial interference task revealed this dissociation. The direction of arrows was identified faster on congruent than on incongruent direction-location trials. Conversely, gaze produced a reversed congruency effect (RCE), with faster identifications on incongruent than congruent trials. To determine the emergence of these gaze-specific attentional mechanisms, 214 Spanish children (4-17 years) divided into 6 age groups, performed the aforementioned task across three experiments. Results showed stimulus-specific developmental trajectories. Whereas the standard effect of arrows was unaffected by age, gaze shifted from an arrow-like effect at age 4 to a gaze-specific RCE at age 12. The orienting mechanisms shared by gaze and arrows are already present in 4-year olds and, throughout childhood, gaze becomes a special social cue with additional attentional properties. Besides orienting attention to a direction, as arrows would do, gaze might orient attention towards a specific object that would be attentionally selected. Such additional components may not fully develop until adolescence. Understanding gaze-specific attentional mechanisms may be crucial for children with atypical socio-cognitive development.

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