Mentalizing eye contact with a face on a video : Gaze direction does not influence autonomic arousal
Lyyra, P., Myllyneva, A., & Hietanen, J. K. (2018). Mentalizing eye contact with a face on a video : Gaze direction does not influence autonomic arousal. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 59(4), 360-367. https://doi.org/10.1111/sjop.12452
Julkaistu sarjassa
Scandinavian Journal of PsychologyPäivämäärä
2018Tekijänoikeudet
© 2018 Scandinavian Psychological Associations and John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Recent research has revealed enhanced autonomic and subjective responses to eye contact only when perceiving another live person. However, these enhanced responses to eye contact are abolished if the viewer believes that the other person is not able to look back at the viewer. We purported to investigate whether this “genuine” eye contact effect can be reproduced with pre‐recorded videos of stimulus persons. Autonomic responses, gaze behavior, and subjective self‐assessments were measured while participants viewed pre‐recorded video persons with direct or averted gaze, imagined that the video person was real, and mentalized that the person could see them or not. Pre‐recorded videos did not evoke similar physiological or subjective eye contact effect as previously observed with live persons, not even when the participants were mentalizing being seen by the person. Gaze tracking results showed, however, increased attention allocation to faces with direct gaze compared to averted gaze directions. The results suggest that elicitation of the physiological arousal in response to genuine eye contact seems to require spontaneous experience of seeing and of being seen by another individual.
...
Julkaisija
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.ISSN Hae Julkaisufoorumista
0036-5564Asiasanat
Julkaisu tutkimustietojärjestelmässä
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/28028258
Metadata
Näytä kaikki kuvailutiedotKokoelmat
Lisenssi
Samankaltainen aineisto
Näytetään aineistoja, joilla on samankaltainen nimeke tai asiasanat.
-
The relationship between skin conductance and eye contact of spouses in couple therapy
Möttönen, Henriikka; Värri, Meri (2017)Katsekontaktin ja ihon sähkönjohtavuuden välistä yhteyttä on tutkittu aiemminkin, mutta tutkimusta ei ole tehty monitoimijaisessa terapiatilanteessa. Tämän tutkimuksen tarkoituksena oli tarkastella ihon sähkönjohtavuuden ... -
Frontal EEG asymmetry and skin conductance responses in lonely and non-lonely individuals to happy and neutral faces of another person
Mattila, Katri (2023)Yksinäisyys on epämiellyttävä tila, jonka aiheuttamat negatiiviset tunteet aktivoivat yksilön motivationaalisia, käytöksellisiä ja kognitiivisia prosesseja. Yksinäisyys saa aikaan motivaation lähestyä uudelleen toisia ... -
Homeostasis and self-regulation
von Weissenberg, Joachim (Taylor & Francis, 2024)Homeostasis, a self-regulating process that aims for stability, is presented to be the most fundamental regulatory principle of the psyche. Stability, or avoiding the extremes, is crucial for survival. The mind operates ... -
Fatigue while driving in a car simulator : effects on vigilance performance and autonomic skin conductance
Inkeri, Heidi (2010)In this vigilance research the effect of fatigue on driver’s voluntary reaction times (RT) and autonomic skin conductance (SC) was studied. Participants (n=17) drove approximately 3 hours in a simulator responding ... -
Look at them and they will notice you : Distractor-independent attentional capture by direct gaze in change blindness
Lyyra, Pessi; Astikainen, Piia; Hietanen, Jari K. (Routledge, 2018)Humans have shown a detection advantage of direct vs. averted gaze stimuli in visual search tasks. However, instead of attentional capture by direct gaze, the detection advantage in visual search may depend on attention-grabbing ...
Ellei toisin mainittu, julkisesti saatavilla olevia JYX-metatietoja (poislukien tiivistelmät) saa vapaasti uudelleenkäyttää CC0-lisenssillä.