“…While participants predominately looked at the face of stimuli rated in the loveeliciting condition, they fixated comparatively more often body parts of stimuli in the lusteliciting condition. In addition, other eye tracking studies revealed that eye movement data, for example on pupil dilation or gaze time, differed between sexually relevant and irrelevant stimulus material (e.g., Attard-Johnson, Bindemann, & Ciardha, 2016;Bradley, Costa, & Lang, 2015;Dawson & Chivers, 2016;Fromberger et al, 2012;. Dawson and Chivers (2016) suggested that these findings imply sexual interest-specific allocation of attention that influences 4 sexual information processing as well as behavioral reactions both at an automatic and an intentional level.…”