Abstract
We investigated Ricciardelli et al.’s (2002) claim, that the tendency for gaze direction to elicit automatic attentional following is unique to biologically significant information. Participants made voluntary saccades to targets on the left or the right of a display, which were either congruent or incongruent with a centrally presented distractor (eye-gaze or arrow). Contrary to Ricciardelli et al., for both distractor types, saccade latencies were slower, and participants made more directional errors, on incongruent than on congruent trials. Moreover, a cost-benefit analysis showed no difference between the two distractor types. However, latencies for erroneous saccades were faster than correctly directed saccades for the eye-gaze distractors, but not for the arrow distractors.
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The first author was supported by a fellowship from the Wolfson Research Institute at the University of Durham.
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Kuhn, G., Benson, V. The influence of eye-gaze and arrow pointing distractor cues on voluntary eye movements. Perception & Psychophysics 69, 966–971 (2007). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03193934
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03193934