HIGHLIGHTS
- who: ufeffZheufeff ufeffChenufeff from the Germany Guangzhou University have published the article: Do gaze and non-gaze stimuli trigger different spatial interference effects? It depends on stimulus perceivability, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
- what: Many studies have demonstrated that perceiving someone else`s gaze induces attention to orient toward the direction of the gaze, even when the direction indicated by the gaze is task irrelevant (Friesen and Kingstone, 1998; Langton and Bruce, 1999) or detrimental to the behavioral goal (Driver et_al, 1999; Downing et_al, 2004; Friesen et_al, 2004). To discriminate the direction of the gaze, participants . . .
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