A novel perceptual trait: gaze predilection for faces during visual exploration

Humans are social animals and typically tend to seek social interactions. In our daily life we constantly move our gaze to collect visual information which often includes social information, such as others’ emotions and intentions. Recent studies began to explore how individuals vary in their gaze b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2019-07, Vol.9 (1), p.10714-12, Article 10714
Hauptverfasser: Guy, Nitzan, Azulay, Hagar, Kardosh, Rasha, Weiss, Yarden, Hassin, Ran R., Israel, Salomon, Pertzov, Yoni
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 10714
container_title Scientific reports
container_volume 9
creator Guy, Nitzan
Azulay, Hagar
Kardosh, Rasha
Weiss, Yarden
Hassin, Ran R.
Israel, Salomon
Pertzov, Yoni
description Humans are social animals and typically tend to seek social interactions. In our daily life we constantly move our gaze to collect visual information which often includes social information, such as others’ emotions and intentions. Recent studies began to explore how individuals vary in their gaze behavior. However, these studies focused on basic features of eye movements (such as the length of movements) and did not examine the observer predilection for specific social features such as faces. We preformed two test-retest experiments examining the amount of time individuals fixate directly on faces embedded in images of naturally occurring scenes. We report on stable and robust individual differences in visual predilection for faces across time and tasks. Individuals’ preference to fixate on faces could not be explained by a preference for fixating on low-level salient regions (e.g. color, intensity, orientation) nor by individual differences in the Big-Five personality traits. We conclude that during visual exploration individuals vary in the amount of time they direct their gaze towards faces. This tendency is a trait that not only reflects individuals’ preferences but also influences the amount of information gathered by each observer, therefore influencing the basis for later cognitive processing and decisions.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/s41598-019-47110-x
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subjects 631/378/2645
631/378/2649/1723
631/378/3919
631/477/2811
Adult
Biological Variation, Individual
Cognitive ability
Exploration
Facial Recognition
Female
Fixation, Ocular
Humanities and Social Sciences
Humans
Information processing
Male
multidisciplinary
Orientation behavior
Preferences
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
Social behavior
Social interactions
title A novel perceptual trait: gaze predilection for faces during visual exploration
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