Journal
COGNITION
Volume 117, Issue 3, Pages 319-331Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2010.09.003
Keywords
Eye movements; Social attention; Social status; Speech perception; Dynamic scene perception
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Human visual attention operates in a context that is complex, social and dynamic. To explore this, we recorded people taking part in a group decision-making task and then showed video clips of these situations to new participants while tracking their eye movements. Observers spent the majority of time looking at the people in the videos, and in particular at their eyes and faces. The social status of the people in the clips had been rated by their peers in the group task, and this status hierarchy strongly predicted where eye-tracker participants looked: high-status individuals were gazed at much more often, and for longer, than low-status individuals, even over short, 20-s videos. Fixation was temporally coupled to the person who was talking at any one time, but this did not account for the effect of social status on attention. These results are consistent with a gaze system that is attuned to the presence of other individuals, to their social status within a group, and to the information most useful for social interaction. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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