People's interaction with the social environment depends on the ability to attend social cues with human faces being a key vehicle of this information. This study explores whether directing the attention to gender or emotion of a face interferes with ongoing actions. In two experiments, participants reached for one of two possible targets by relying on one of two features of a face, namely, emotion (Experiment 1) or gender (Experiment 2) of a non-target stimulus (a task-relevant distractor). Participants' reaching movements deviated toward the task-relevant distractor in both experiments. However, when attending to the gender of the face the distractor effect was modulated by both gender (task-relevant feature) and emotion (task-irrelevant feature), with the largest movement deviation being observed toward angry male faces. Endogenous allocation of attention toward faces elicits a competing motor response to the ongoing action and the emotional content of the face contributes to this process at a more automatic and implicit level. © 2015 Taylor & Francis.

Do emotions or gender drive our actions? A study of motor distractibility / Ambron, Elisabetta; Rumiati, Raffaella; Foroni, Francesco. - In: COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE. - ISSN 1758-8928. - 7:1-4(2016), pp. 160-169. [10.1080/17588928.2015.1085373]

Do emotions or gender drive our actions? A study of motor distractibility

Ambron, Elisabetta;Rumiati, Raffaella;Foroni, Francesco
2016-01-01

Abstract

People's interaction with the social environment depends on the ability to attend social cues with human faces being a key vehicle of this information. This study explores whether directing the attention to gender or emotion of a face interferes with ongoing actions. In two experiments, participants reached for one of two possible targets by relying on one of two features of a face, namely, emotion (Experiment 1) or gender (Experiment 2) of a non-target stimulus (a task-relevant distractor). Participants' reaching movements deviated toward the task-relevant distractor in both experiments. However, when attending to the gender of the face the distractor effect was modulated by both gender (task-relevant feature) and emotion (task-irrelevant feature), with the largest movement deviation being observed toward angry male faces. Endogenous allocation of attention toward faces elicits a competing motor response to the ongoing action and the emotional content of the face contributes to this process at a more automatic and implicit level. © 2015 Taylor & Francis.
2016
7
1-4
160
169
Ambron, Elisabetta; Rumiati, Raffaella; Foroni, Francesco
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11767/11955
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