4.2 Article

The importance of context information for the spatial specificity of gaze cueing

Journal

ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS
Volume 75, Issue 5, Pages 967-982

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13414-013-0444-y

Keywords

Gaze cueing; Top-down control; Eye movements; Spatial allocation of attention; Psychophysics

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft) within the Excellence Cluster Cognition for Technical Systems (CoTeSys)
  2. Graduate School of Systemic Neurosciences, Munich

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In three experiments, we investigated the spatial allocation of attention in response to central gaze cues. In particular, we examined whether the allocation of attentional resources is influenced by context information-that is, the presence or absence of reference objects (i.e., placeholders) in the periphery. On each trial, gaze cues were followed by a target stimulus to which participants had to respond by keypress or by performing a target-directed saccade. Targets were presented either in an empty visual field (Exps. 1 and 2) or in previewed location placeholders (Exp. 3) and appeared at one of either 18 (Exp. 1) or six (Exps. 2 and 3) possible positions. The spatial distribution of attention was determined by comparing response times as a function of the distance between the cued and target positions. Gaze cueing was not specific to the exact cued position, but instead generalized equally to all positions in the cued hemifield, when no context information was provided. However, gaze direction induced a facilitation effect specific to the exact gazed-at position when reference objects were presented. We concluded that the presence of possible objects in the periphery to which gaze cues could refer is a prerequisite for attention shifts being specific to the gazed-at position.

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