2006
DOI: 10.3758/bf03213926
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Gaze cuing and affective judgments of objects: I like what you look at

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Cited by 202 publications
(248 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
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“…As mentioned in the introduction, Bayliss et al (2006) found no evaluative effect when using arrows instead of eye gaze. Yet, a critical reader may correctly point out that such effect might have emerged if we had used arrows in the present research.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 86%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As mentioned in the introduction, Bayliss et al (2006) found no evaluative effect when using arrows instead of eye gaze. Yet, a critical reader may correctly point out that such effect might have emerged if we had used arrows in the present research.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…These studies all involved evaluative measures of stimuli previously associated with human faces whose eye gaze orientation toward stimuli varied. Two of these studies found better liking of objects previously associated with an eye gaze directed at them (Bayliss, Paul, Cannon & Tipper, 2006), an effect that vanished when eyes were replaced by arrows as orienting stimuli (Bayliss et al, 2006) or when the faces looked disgusted (Bayliss, Frischen, Fenske & Tipper, 2007). However, these studies relied on explicit evaluative ratings of the objects.…”
Section: Accepted Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research on gaze cueing has shown that participants find partners who establish mutual gaze with them more likable and attractive than those who avert their gaze (Mason, Tatkow, and Macrae 2005). Similarly, participants evaluate objects that their partners are looking toward more favorably than they evaluate those that their partners are looking away from (Bayliss et al 2006).…”
Section: What Key Outcomes?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, we are highly perceptive of people's direction of gaze and we generally attend to where others are looking (Watt, 1992;Langton & Bruce, 1999;Freeth, Chapman, Ropar & Mitchell, in press), even if it is not predictive of anything (Driver et al 1999;Bayliss & Tipper, 2005;Friesen & Kingstone, 1998). Processing eye gaze direction can even cause an individual to prefer a particular object which has been looked at over one that has not (Bayliss, Paul, Cannon & Tipper, 2006). The propensity to be interested in the information conveyed by people's eyes is an important social mechanism that develops early in life; two to five-day-old newborns are able to discriminate between direct and averted gaze, showing a preference for looking at direct gaze (Farroni et al 2002).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%