4.5 Article

Direct Gaze Holds Attention, but Not in Individuals with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

期刊

BRAIN SCIENCES
卷 12, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci12020288

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eye contact; obsessive-compulsive disorder; social attention; social cognition

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  1. University of Padova [DPSS-SID2019]

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This study found that individuals with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) show an unusual attentional response to direct gaze. Unlike the healthy control group, they did not exhibit significant differences in response time for faces with direct gaze. This suggests that individuals with OCD may have unique cognitive characteristics when processing eye-gaze stimuli.
The attentional response to eye-gaze stimuli is still largely unexplored in individuals with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Here, we focused on an attentional phenomenon according to which a direct-gaze face can hold attention in a perceiver. Individuals with OCD and a group of matched healthy controls were asked to discriminate, through a speeded manual response, a peripheral target. Meanwhile, a task-irrelevant face displaying either direct gaze (in the eye-contact condition) or averted gaze (in the no-eye-contact condition) was also presented at the centre of the screen. Overall, the latencies were slower for faces with direct gaze than for faces with averted gaze; however, this difference was reliable in the healthy control group but not in the OCD group. This suggests the presence of an unusual attentional response to direct gaze in this clinical population.

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