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Foot cues can elicit covert orienting of attention

Mario Dalmaso

2023Psychological Research12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Humans tend to orient their attentional resources towards the same location indicated by spatial signals coming from the others, such as pointing fingers, head turns, or eye-gaze. Here, two experiments investigated whether an attentional orienting response can be elicited even by foot cues. Participants were asked to localize a peripheral target while a task-irrelevant picture of a naked human foot, oriented leftward or rightward, was presented on the centre of the screen. The foot appeared in a neutral posture (i.e., standing upright) or an action-oriented posture (i.e., walking/running). In Experiment 1, neutral and action-oriented feet were presented in two distinct blocks, while in Experiment 2 they were presented intermixed. The results showed that the action-oriented foot, but not the neutral one, elicited an orienting response, though this only emerged in Experiment 2. This work suggests that attentional shifts can be induced by action-oriented foot cues, as long as these stimuli are made contextually salient.

Topics & Concepts

CovertFoot (prosody)PsychologyGazeAction (physics)SalientCognitive psychologyTask (project management)Computer scienceArtificial intelligenceManagementEconomicsQuantum mechanicsLinguisticsPhysicsPsychoanalysisPhilosophyNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesFace Recognition and PerceptionVisual perception and processing mechanisms
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