“…Beyond the spatial cuing paradigms, other tasks have been developed for exploring the distinctive nature of eye gaze. For example, several variants of the spatial Stroop task have shown clear dissociation between eye gaze and arrows when they are used as targets rather than cues (Cañadas & Lupiá ñez, 2012;Marotta, Lupiá ñez, Romá n-Caballero, Narganes-Pineda, & Martí n-Aré valo, 2019;Marotta, Romá n-Caballero, & Lupiá ñez, 2018;Tanaka, Ishikawa, Oyama, & Okubo, 2022a). In particular, eye gaze and arrows lead to opposite spatial interference effects in which left or right looking/pointing target randomly appeared to the left or right side of the fixation point and participants are required to identify the direction of both targets while ignoring their location.…”