Intergroup threat gates social attention in humans.

Abstract:

:Humans shift their attention to follow another person's gaze direction, a phenomenon called gaze cueing. This study examined whether a particular social factor, intergroup threat, modulates gaze cueing. As expected, stronger responses of a particular in-group to a threatening out-group were observed when the in-group, conditioned to perceive threat from one of two out-groups, was presented with facial stimuli from the threatening and non-threatening out-groups. These results suggest that intergroup threat plays an important role in shaping social attention. Furthermore, larger gaze-cueing effects were found for threatening out-group faces than for in-group faces only at the 200 ms but not the 800 ms stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA); the specificity of the gaze-cueing effects at the short SOA suggests that threat cues modulate the involuntary component of gaze cueing.

journal_name

Biol Lett

journal_title

Biology letters

authors

Chen Y,Zhao Y

doi

10.1098/rsbl.2014.1055

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2015-02-01 00:00:00

pages

20141055

issue

2

eissn

1744-9561

issn

1744-957X

pii

rsbl.2014.1055

journal_volume

11

pub_type

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