What gaze adds to arrows: Changes in attentional response to gaze versus arrows in childhood and adolescence
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
John Wiley & Sons
Materia
Attentional orienting Development Gaze following Social attention Socio-cognitive development Spatial congruency effect
Fecha
2022-01-07Referencia bibliográfica
Aranda-Martín, B., Ballesteros-Duperón, M. Á., & Lupiáñez, J. (2022). What gaze adds to arrows: Changes in attentional response to gaze versus arrows in childhood and adolescence. British Journal of Psychology, 00, 1– 21. [https://doi.org/10.1111/bjop.12552]
Patrocinador
Spanish Government fpu16/07124Resumen
From early ages, gaze acts as a cue to infer the interests, behaviours,
thoughts and emotions of social partners. Despite
sharing attentional properties with other non-social
directional
stimuli, such as arrows, gaze produces unique effects.
A spatial interference task revealed this dissociation. The
direction of arrows was identified faster on congruent than
on incongruent direction-location
trials. Conversely, gaze
produced a reversed congruency effect (RCE), with faster
identifications on incongruent than congruent trials. To
determine the emergence of these gaze-specific
attentional
mechanisms, 214 Spanish children (4–17
years) divided into
6 age groups, performed the aforementioned task across
three experiments. Results showed stimulus-specific
developmental
trajectories. Whereas the standard effect of arrows
was unaffected by age, gaze shifted from an arrow-like
effect
at age 4 to a gaze-specific
RCE at age 12. The orienting
mechanisms shared by gaze and arrows are already present
in 4-year
olds and, throughout childhood, gaze becomes
a special social cue with additional attentional properties.
Besides orienting attention to a direction, as arrows would
do, gaze might orient attention towards a specific object that
would be attentionally selected. Such additional components
may not fully develop until adolescence. Understanding gaze-specific
attentional mechanisms may be crucial for
children with atypical socio-cognitive
development.