Title of article
Do social utility judgments influence attentional processing?
Author/Authors
Shore، نويسنده , , Danielle M. and Heerey، نويسنده , , Erin A.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
9
From page
114
To page
122
Abstract
Research shows that social judgments influence decision-making in social environments. For example, judgments about an interaction partners’ trustworthiness affect a variety of social behaviors and decisions. One mechanism by which social judgments may influence social decisions is by biasing the automatic allocation of attention toward certain social partners, thereby shaping the information people acquire. Using an attentional blink paradigm, we investigate how trustworthiness judgments alter the allocation of attention to social stimuli in a set of two experiments. The first experiment investigates trustworthiness judgments based solely on a social partner’s facial appearance. The second experiment examines the effect of trustworthiness judgments based on experienced behavior. In the first, strong appearance-based judgments (positive and negative) enhanced stimulus recognizability but did not alter the size of the attentional blink, suggesting that appearance-based social judgments enhance face memory but do not affect pre-attentive processing. However, in the second experiment, in which judgments were based on behavioral experience rather than appearance, positive judgments enhanced pre-attentive processing of trustworthy faces. This suggests that a stimulus’s potential benefits, rather than its disadvantages, shape the automatic distribution of attentional resources. These results have implications for understanding how appearance- and behavior-based social cues shape attention distribution in social environments.
Keywords
trustworthiness , Utility , Social judgments , Attentional blink
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2077823
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