
Humans tend to shift attention in response to the averted gaze of a face they are fixating, a phenomenon known as gaze cuing. In the present paper, we aimed to address whether the social status of the cuing face modulates this phenomenon. Participants were asked to look at the faces of 16 individuals and read fictive curriculum vitae associated with each of them that could describe the person as having a high or low social status. The association between each specific face and either high or low social status was counterbalanced between participants. The same faces were then used as stimuli in a gaze-cuing task. The results showed a greater gaze-cuing effect for high-status faces than for low-status faces, independently of the specific identity of the face. These findings confirm previous evidence regarding the important role of social factors in shaping social attention and show that a modulation of gaze cuing can be observed even when knowledge about social status is acquired through episodic learning.
Adult, Male, Young Adult, Age Distribution, Italy, Social Class, Social Perception, Face, Visual Perception, Humans, Attention, Female, Cues, Photic Stimulation
Adult, Male, Young Adult, Age Distribution, Italy, Social Class, Social Perception, Face, Visual Perception, Humans, Attention, Female, Cues, Photic Stimulation
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