• Title of article

    Averted eye-gaze disrupts configural face encoding

  • Author/Authors

    Young، نويسنده , , Steven G. and Slepian، نويسنده , , Michael L. and Wilson، نويسنده , , John Paul and Hugenberg، نويسنده , , Kurt، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    94
  • To page
    99
  • Abstract
    Faces are processed in a configural manner (i.e., without decomposition into individual face features), an effect attributed to humans having a high degree of face processing expertise. However, even when perceiver expertise is accounted for, configural processing is subject to a number of influences, including the social relevance of a face. In the current research, we present two experiments that document the influence of eye-gaze direction (direct or averted) on configural encoding of faces. Experiment 1 uses a version of the composite face paradigm to investigate how eye-gaze influences configural encoding. The results indicate that averted gaze disrupts configural encoding compared to direct eye-gaze. Experiment 2 manipulates whether perceivers can engage in configural encoding using face-inversion, and finds the inversion effects are greater for faces with direct than averted-gaze. We interpret these results as evidence that averted eye-gaze signals that a face is subjectively unimportant, thereby disrupting configural encoding.
  • Keywords
    Face memory , Face Perception , Eye-gaze
  • Journal title
    Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
  • Serial Year
    2014
  • Journal title
    Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
  • Record number

    1961504