September 2019
Volume 19, Issue 10
Open Access
Vision Sciences Society Annual Meeting Abstract  |   September 2019
Smile and the world watches: Capture by happy gaze cues outside an attentional control set.
Author Affiliations & Notes
  • Lindsay Plater
    Department of Psychology, University of Guelph
  • Akshu Valecha
    Department of Psychology, University of Guelph
  • Rashmi Gupta
    Department of Psychology, Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay
  • Jay Pratt
    Department of Psychology, University of Toronto
  • Naseem Al-Aidroos
    Department of Psychology, University of Guelph
Journal of Vision September 2019, Vol.19, 217a. doi:https://doi.org/10.1167/19.10.217a
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      Lindsay Plater, Akshu Valecha, Rashmi Gupta, Jay Pratt, Naseem Al-Aidroos; Smile and the world watches: Capture by happy gaze cues outside an attentional control set.. Journal of Vision 2019;19(10):217a. https://doi.org/10.1167/19.10.217a.

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      © ARVO (1962-2015); The Authors (2016-present)

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Abstract

Visual attention is biased towards stimuli portraying emotion. Recently, Gupta, Hur, and Lavie (2016; Emotion) demonstrated that positive valence stimuli have a unique effect on attention; whereas high perceptual loads can prevent negative task-irrelevant stimuli from interfering with task performance, they do not prevent interference from positive task-irrelevant stimuli. Across two experiments, we examined the generalizability of this finding by testing whether positive task-irrelevant stimuli capture attention even when inconsistent with an observer’s attentional control set (ACS). Participants in Experiment 1 completed a colour-based go/no-go task, thereby inducing an ACS for the go colour. Go/no-go targets were presented to the left or right of fixation, and shortly before each target a schematic drawing of an emotionally neutral face appeared at fixation gazing to the left or right. As is typically found, although gaze direction was non-predictive of the peripheral target’s location, participants responded more quickly to go targets appearing in the gazed-at location than the non-gazed-at location, suggesting these gaze cues captured and directed attention. Capture only occurred for faces drawn in the go colour, however, establishing that attentional capture by neutral gaze cues is contingent on ACSs. To examine the interaction between emotional valence and ACSs, Experiment 2 used the same design, but introduced an emotional manipulation: the expression on the face was either happy or sad. While sad faces replicated the results from Experiment 1, happy faces elicited a cueing effect regardless of the colour they were drawn in, indicating that happy faces are capable of capturing attention even when the face colour is inconsistent with the ACS. In addition to generalizing the conclusions of Gupta et al., the present results suggest that stimuli portraying positive emotions may be of sufficient behavioural relevance that “positivity” is a feature included in all ACSs by default.

Acknowledgement: This work was supported in part by NSERC grants to Naseem Al-Aidroos and Lindsay Plater. 
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