CAN WE RESIST ANOTHER PERSON'S GAZE?

Adaptive adjustments of strategies are needed to optimize behaviour in a dynamic and uncertain world. A key function in implementing flexible behaviour and exerting self-control is represented by the ability to stop the execution of an action when it is no longer appropriate for the environmental re...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Barbara Francesca Marta Marino, GIOVANNI eMIRABELLA, Rossana eActis-Grosso, Emanuela eBricolo, Paola eRicciardelli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
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Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnbeh.2015.00258/full
Description
Summary:Adaptive adjustments of strategies are needed to optimize behaviour in a dynamic and uncertain world. A key function in implementing flexible behaviour and exerting self-control is represented by the ability to stop the execution of an action when it is no longer appropriate for the environmental requests. Importantly, stimuli in our environment are not equally relevant and some are more valuable than others. One example is the gaze of other people, which is known to convey important social information about their direction of attention and their emotional and mental states. Indeed, gaze direction has a significant impact on the execution of voluntary saccades of an observer since it is capable of inducing in the observer an automatic gaze following behaviour: a phenomenon named social or joint attention. Nevertheless, people can exert volitional inhibitory control on saccadic eye movements both during their initiation and their planning. Little is known about the interaction between gaze direction signals and volitional inhibition of saccades. To fill this gap, we administered a countermanding task to 15 healthy participants in which they were asked to observe the eye region of a face with the eyes shut appearing at central fixation. In one condition, participants were required
ISSN:1662-5153