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The role of cognitive load in modulating social looking: a mobile eye tracking study

Laura J. Bianchi, Alan Kingstone, Evan F. Risko

2020Cognitive Research Principles and Implications14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The effect of cognitive load on social attention was examined across three experiments in a live pedestrian passing scenario (Experiments 1 and 2) and with the same scenario presented as a video (Experiment 3). In all three experiments, the load was manipulated using an auditory 2-back task. While the participant was wearing a mobile eye-tracker, the participant's fixation behavior toward a confederate was recorded and analyzed based on temporal proximity from the confederate (near or far) and the specific regions of the confederate being observed (i.e., head or body). In Experiment 1 we demonstrated an effect of cognitive load such that there was a lower proportion of fixations and time spent fixating toward the confederate in the load condition. A similar pattern of results was found in Experiment 2 when a within-subject design was used. In Experiment 3, which employed a less authentic social situation (i.e., video), a similar effect of cognitive load was observed. Collectively, these results suggest attentional resources play a central role in social attentional behaviors in both authentic (real-world) and less authentic (video recorded) situations.

Topics & Concepts

Cognitive loadEye trackingPsychologyFixation (population genetics)CognitionCognitive psychologyEye movementExperimental psychologyGazeTask (project management)Computer scienceComputer visionEngineeringSociologyPsychoanalysisPopulationDemographySystems engineeringNeuroscienceVisual perception and processing mechanismsNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesGaze Tracking and Assistive Technology
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