4.1 Article

Long-term gaze cueing effects: Evidence for retrieval of prior states of attention from memory

Journal

VISUAL COGNITION
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages 351-364

Publisher

PSYCHOLOGY PRESS
DOI: 10.1080/13506280544000192

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When people observe other individuals shift gaze to a particular location, the observer's attention automatically and rapidly shifts to the same location. Initial studies provided evidence in support of the idea that such gaze-evoked shifts of attention were transient, no longer being observed after about 1000ms. However, in contrast to the idea that gaze shifts of attention are transitory, the current work suggests that under certain conditions long-term gaze cueing effects can be detected over a period of 3 minutes. We propose that attention states that are activated when encoding an object such as a face can be retrieved from memory when the face is re-encountered some minutes later.

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