The uniqueness of social attention revisited: working memory load interferes with endogenous but not social orienting.

Exp Brain Res

Department of Psychology, McGill University, 1205 Dr Penfield Ave, Montreal, QC, H3A1B1, Canada,

Published: December 2013

It is well known that perceived eye gaze direction influences attentional orienting. However, it still remains unclear whether social orienting involves exogenous or endogenous attentional control. To address this issue, we examined if social orienting and endogenous orienting were differentially modulated by working memory load, which is known to interfere with endogenous but not exogenous attention. To do so, we manipulated eye direction as either spatially counterpredictive in Experiment 1 or spatially predictive in Experiment 2 while participants performed a cueing task either in isolation or under working memory load. We found that when social attention and endogenous attention diverged spatially in Experiment 1, social orienting elicited by gaze direction remained intact while endogenous orienting elicited by the cue's predictive meaning was suppressed under working memory load, suggesting independence between social orienting and endogenous orienting. Indeed, a comparison between the sum of isolated social orienting and endogenous orienting magnitudes from Experiment 1 relative to their combined measure from Experiment 2 confirmed that social attention and endogenous attention operated in parallel. Together, our data show that social orienting is independent from endogenous orienting and further suggest that paying attention to social information might involve either exogenous or unique attentional mechanisms.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00221-013-3705-zDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

social orienting
28
endogenous orienting
20
working memory
16
memory load
16
orienting
13
social attention
12
orienting endogenous
12
endogenous
10
social
10
gaze direction
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!