1,350
Views
116
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Gaze selection in complex social scenes

, &
Pages 341-355 | Published online: 27 Feb 2008

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (16)

Eunice G. Fernandes, Benjamin W. Tatler, Gillian Slessor & Louise H. Phillips. (2022) Age Differences in Gaze Following: Older Adults Follow Gaze More than Younger Adults When free-viewing Scenes. Experimental Aging Research 0:0, pages 1-18.
Read now
Sophie N. Lanthier, Mona J. H. Zhu, Crystal S. J. Byun, Michelle Jarick & Alan Kingstone. (2022) The costs and benefits to memory when observing and experiencing live eye contact. Visual Cognition 30:1-2, pages 70-84.
Read now
Ana Cláudia Campos, Patrícia Pinto & Noel Scott. (2020) Bottom-up factors of attention during the tourist experience: an empirical study. Current Issues in Tourism 23:24, pages 3111-3133.
Read now
Jonas D. Großekathöfer, Kristina Suchotzki & Matthias Gamer. (2020) Gaze cueing in naturalistic scenes under top-down modulation – Effects on gaze behaviour and memory performance. Visual Cognition 28:2, pages 135-147.
Read now
Alexandra E. D’Agostino, David Kattan & Turhan Canli. (2019) An fMRI study of loneliness in younger and older adults. Social Neuroscience 14:2, pages 136-148.
Read now
Linda Lönnqvist, Soile Loukusa, Tuula Hurtig, Leena Mäkinen, Antti Siipo, Eero Väyrynen, Pertti Palo, Seppo Laukka, Laura Mämmelä, Marja-Leena Mattila & Hanna Ebeling. (2017) How young adults with autism spectrum disorder watch and interpret pragmatically complex scenes. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 70:11, pages 2331-2346.
Read now
Anna K. Bobak, Benjamin A. Parris, Nicola J. Gregory, Rachel J. Bennetts & Sarah Bate. (2017) Eye-movement strategies in developmental prosopagnosia and “super” face recognition. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 70:2, pages 201-217.
Read now
Tom Foulsham & Lucy Anne Sanderson. (2013) Look who's talking? Sound changes gaze behaviour in a dynamic social scene. Visual Cognition 21:7, pages 922-944.
Read now
Paul Roux, Christine Passerieux & Franck Ramus. (2013) Kinematics matters: A new eye-tracking investigation of animated triangles. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 66:2, pages 229-244.
Read now
Kirsten A. Dalrymple, Alexander K. Gray, Brielle L. Perler, Elina Birmingham, Walter F. Bischof, Jason J. S. Barton & Alan Kingstone. (2013) Eyeing the eyes in social scenes: Evidence for top-down control of stimulus selection in simultanagnosia. Cognitive Neuropsychology 30:1, pages 25-40.
Read now
Elina Birmingham, Moran Cerf & Ralph Adolphs. (2011) Comparing social attention in autism and amygdala lesions: Effects of stimulus and task condition. Social Neuroscience 6:5-6, pages 420-435.
Read now
David D. Woods & Nadine B. Sarter. (2010) Capturing the dynamics of attention control from individual to distributed systems: the shape of models to come. Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science 11:1-2, pages 7-28.
Read now
Gustav Kuhn, BenjaminW. Tatler & GeoffG. Cole. (2009) You look where I look! Effect of gaze cues on overt and covert attention in misdirection. Visual Cognition 17:6-7, pages 925-944.
Read now
Geoffrey Underwood, Tom Foulsham & Katherine Humphrey. (2009) Saliency and scan patterns in the inspection of real-world scenes: Eye movements during encoding and recognition. Visual Cognition 17:6-7, pages 812-834.
Read now
Elina Birmingham, WalterF. Bischof & Alan Kingstone. (2009) Get real! Resolving the debate about equivalent social stimuli. Visual Cognition 17:6-7, pages 904-924.
Read now
BradleyS. Gibson, CharlesL. Folk, Jan Theeuwes & Alan Kingstone. (2008) Introduction. Visual Cognition 16:2-3, pages 145-154.
Read now

Articles from other publishers (100)

Francesca Capozzi & Alan Kingstone. (2023) The effects of visual attention on social behavior. Social and Personality Psychology Compass.
Crossref
A. P. Martinez-Cedillo, Kevin Dent & Tom Foulsham. (2023) Social prioritisation in scene viewing and the effects of a spatial memory load. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics.
Crossref
Mahsa Barzy, Rachel Morgan, Richard Cook & Katie LH Gray. (2023) Are social interactions preferentially attended in real-world scenes? Evidence from change blindness. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, pages 174702182311610.
Crossref
Maximilian Davide Broda, Theresa Haddad & Benjamin de Haas. (2023) Quick, eyes! Isolated upper face regions but not artificial features elicit rapid saccades. Journal of Vision 23:2, pages 5.
Crossref
Andrea Toaiari, Federico Cunico, Francesco Taioli, Ariel Caputo, Gloria Menegaz, Andrea Giachetti, Giovanni Maria Farinella & Marco Cristani. 2023. Image Analysis and Processing – ICIAP 2023. Image Analysis and Processing – ICIAP 2023 352 363 .
Adam M. Berlijn, Lea K. Hildebrandt & Matthias Gamer. (2022) Idiosyncratic viewing patterns of social scenes reflect individual preferences. Journal of Vision 22:13, pages 10.
Crossref
Maximilian Davide Broda & Benjamin de Haas. (2022) Individual differences in looking at persons in scenes. Journal of Vision 22:12, pages 9.
Crossref
Victoria I. Nicholls, Jan M. Wiener, Andrew Isaac Meso & Sebastien Miellet. (2022) The Relative Contribution of Executive Functions and Aging on Attentional Control During Road Crossing. Frontiers in Psychology 13.
Crossref
Effie J. Pereira, Elina Birmingham & Jelena Ristic. (2022) Infrequent faces bias social attention differently in manual and oculomotor measures. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics 84:3, pages 829-842.
Crossref
Felix Hekele, Jan Spilski, Simon Bender & Thomas Lachmann. (2021) Remote vocational learning opportunities—A comparative eye‐tracking investigation of educational 2D videos versus 360° videos for car mechanics. British Journal of Educational Technology 53:2, pages 248-268.
Crossref
Jonas D. Großekathöfer, Christian Seis & Matthias Gamer. (2021) Reality in a sphere: A direct comparison of social attention in the laboratory and the real world. Behavior Research Methods 54:5, pages 2286-2301.
Crossref
Samantha E. A. Gregory, Clíona L. Kelly & Klaus Kessler. (2021) Look Into my “Virtual” Eyes: What Dynamic Virtual Agents add to the Realistic Study of Joint Attention. Frontiers in Virtual Reality 2.
Crossref
Paris Will, Elle Merritt, Rob Jenkins & Alan Kingstone. (2021) The Medusa effect reveals levels of mind perception in pictures. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 118:32.
Crossref
Janet H. Hsiao, Jeehye An, Yueyuan Zheng & Antoni B. Chan. (2021) Do portrait artists have enhanced face processing abilities? Evidence from hidden Markov modeling of eye movements. Cognition 211, pages 104616.
Crossref
Marius Rubo & Matthias Gamer. (2020) Stronger reactivity to social gaze in virtual reality compared to a classical laboratory environment. British Journal of Psychology 112:1, pages 301-314.
Crossref
Roy S. Hessels, Jeroen S. Benjamins, Andrea J. van Doorn, Jan J. Koenderink, Gijs A. Holleman & Ignace T. C. Hooge. (2020) Looking behavior and potential human interactions during locomotion. Journal of Vision 20:10, pages 5.
Crossref
Mario Dalmaso, Luigi Castelli & Giovanni Galfano. (2020) Social modulators of gaze-mediated orienting of attention: A review. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 27:5, pages 833-855.
Crossref
Roy S. Hessels. (2020) How does gaze to faces support face-to-face interaction? A review and perspective. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 27:5, pages 856-881.
Crossref
Chara Ioannou, Divya Seernani, Maria Elena Stefanou, Monica Biscaldi-Schaefer, Ludger Tebartz Van Elst, Christian Fleischhaker, Giuseppe Boccignone & Christoph Klein. (2020) Social Visual Perception Under the Eye of Bayesian Theories in Autism Spectrum Disorder Using Advanced Modeling of Spatial and Temporal Parameters. Frontiers in Psychiatry 11.
Crossref
Nicola C. Anderson, Walter F. Bischof, Tom Foulsham & Alan Kingstone. (2020) Turning the (virtual) world around: Patterns in saccade direction vary with picture orientation and shape in virtual reality. Journal of Vision 20:8, pages 21.
Crossref
Walter F. Bischof, Nicola C. Anderson, Michael T. Doswell & Alan Kingstone. (2020) Visual exploration of omnidirectional panoramic scenes. Journal of Vision 20:7, pages 23.
Crossref
Effie J. Pereira, Elina Birmingham & Jelena Ristic. (2019) The eyes do not have it after all? Attention is not automatically biased towards faces and eyes. Psychological Research 84:5, pages 1407-1423.
Crossref
Anastasia Kuzminykh & Sean Rintel. (2020) Classification of Functional Attention in Video Meetings. Classification of Functional Attention in Video Meetings.
Ryosuke Niimi. (2019) Interacting hands draw attention during scene observation. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics 82:3, pages 1088-1098.
Crossref
Ty W. Boyer, Samuel M. Harding & Bennett I. Bertenthal. (2020) The temporal dynamics of infants' joint attention: Effects of others' gaze cues and manual actions. Cognition 197, pages 104151.
Crossref
Lara Rösler, Marius Rubo & Matthias Gamer. (2019) Artificial Faces Predict Gaze Allocation in Complex Dynamic Scenes. Frontiers in Psychology 10.
Crossref
Guillaume Lio, Roberta Fadda, Giuseppe Doneddu, Jean‐René Duhamel & Angela Sirigu. (2019) Digit-tracking as a new tactile interface for visual perception analysis. Nature Communications 10:1.
Crossref
Liuba Papeo, Nicolas Goupil & Salvador Soto-Faraco. (2019) Visual Search for People Among People. Psychological Science 30:10, pages 1483-1496.
Crossref
Sonia Milani, Lori A. Brotto & Alan Kingstone. (2019) “I can see you”: The impact of implied social presence on visual attention to erotic and neutral stimuli in men and women. The Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality 28:2, pages 105-119.
Crossref
Hassan Mansour & Gustav Kuhn. (2019) Studying “natural” eye movements in an “unnatural” social environment: The influence of social activity, framing, and sub-clinical traits on gaze aversion. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 72:8, pages 1913-1925.
Crossref
Effie J. Pereira, Elina Birmingham & Jelena Ristic. (2019) Contextually-Based Social Attention Diverges across Covert and Overt Measures. Vision 3:2, pages 29.
Crossref
Michelle Jarick & Renee Bencic. (2019) Eye Contact Is a Two-Way Street: Arousal Is Elicited by the Sending and Receiving of Eye Gaze Information. Frontiers in Psychology 10.
Crossref
Sophie N. Lanthier, Michelle Jarick, Mona J. H. Zhu, Crystal S. J. Byun & Alan Kingstone. (2019) Socially Communicative Eye Contact and Gender Affect Memory. Frontiers in Psychology 10.
Crossref
Nicola J Gregory & Jastine V Antolin. (2018) Does social presence or the potential for interaction reduce social gaze in online social scenarios? Introducing the “live lab” paradigm. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 72:4, pages 779-791.
Crossref
Albert End & Matthias Gamer. (2019) Task instructions can accelerate the early preference for social features in naturalistic scenes. Royal Society Open Science 6:3, pages 180596.
Crossref
Jane E. Raymond & Scott P. Jones. (2019) Strategic Eye Movements are Used to Support Object Authentication. Scientific Reports 9:1.
Crossref
Hannah Scott, Jonathan P. Batten & Gustav Kuhn. (2018) Why are you looking at me? It’s because I’m talking, but mostly because I’m staring or not doing much. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics 81:1, pages 109-118.
Crossref
Walter F. Bischof, Nicola C. Anderson & Alan Kingstone. 2019. Eye Movement Research. Eye Movement Research 407 448 .
Karisa B. Parkington & Roxane J. Itier. (2018) One versus two eyes makes a difference! Early face perception is modulated by featural fixation and feature context. Cortex 109, pages 35-49.
Crossref
Aleya Flechsenhar, Olivia Larson, Albert End & Matthias Gamer. (2018) Investigating overt and covert shifts of attention within social naturalistic scenes. Journal of Vision 18:12, pages 11.
Crossref
Katie L. H. Gray, Anthony Haffey, Hristina L. Mihaylova & Bhismadev Chakrabarti. (2018) Lack of Privileged Access to Awareness for Rewarding Social Scenes in Autism Spectrum Disorder. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 48:10, pages 3311-3318.
Crossref
Aleya Flechsenhar, Lara Rösler & Matthias Gamer. (2018) Attentional Selection of Social Features Persists Despite Restricted Bottom-Up Information and Affects Temporal Viewing Dynamics. Scientific Reports 8:1.
Crossref
Pessi Lyyra, Aki Myllyneva & Jari K. Hietanen. (2018) Mentalizing eye contact with a face on a video: Gaze direction does not influence autonomic arousal. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology 59:4, pages 360-367.
Crossref
S Fotios, J Uttley & S Fox. (2016) Exploring the nature of visual fixations on other pedestrians. Lighting Research & Technology 50:4, pages 511-521.
Crossref
Roy S. Hessels, Gijs A. Holleman, Tim H. W. Cornelissen, Ignace T. C. Hooge & Chantal Kemner. (2018) Eye contact takes two – autistic and social anxiety traits predict gaze behavior in dyadic interaction. Journal of Experimental Psychopathology 9:2, pages jep.062917.
Crossref
Paul J Robertson, Mike Callan, Charlotte Nevison & Matthew A Timmis. (2017) Is visual search strategy different between level of judo coach when acquiring visual information from the preparation phase of judo contests?. International Journal of Sports Science & Coaching 13:2, pages 186-200.
Crossref
Susannah Freebody & Gustav Kuhn. (2018) Own-age biases in adults’ and children’s joint attention: Biased face prioritization, but not gaze following!. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 71:2, pages 372-379.
Crossref
Gemma Graham, James D. Sauer, Lucy Akehurst, Jenny Smith & Anne P. Hillstrom. (2018) CCTV Observation: The Effects of Event Type and Instructions on Fixation Behaviour in an Applied Change Blindness Task. Applied Cognitive Psychology 32:1, pages 4-13.
Crossref
John P. Hutson, Tim J. Smith, Joseph P. Magliano & Lester C. Loschky. (2017) What is the role of the film viewer? The effects of narrative comprehension and viewing task on gaze control in film. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications 2:1.
Crossref
Neil M. Thomas, Susan Dewhurst, Theodoros M. Bampouras, Tim Donovan, Andrea Macaluso & Giuseppe Vannozzi. (2017) Smooth pursuits decrease balance control during locomotion in young and older healthy females. Experimental Brain Research 235:9, pages 2661-2668.
Crossref
Aleya Felicia Flechsenhar & Matthias Gamer. (2017) Top-down influence on gaze patterns in the presence of social features. PLOS ONE 12:8, pages e0183799.
Crossref
Chris N. H. Street & Alan Kingstone. (2017) Aligning Spinoza with Descartes: An informed Cartesian account of the truth bias. British Journal of Psychology 108:3, pages 453-466.
Crossref
Albert End & Matthias Gamer. (2017) Preferential Processing of Social Features and Their Interplay with Physical Saliency in Complex Naturalistic Scenes. Frontiers in Psychology 8.
Crossref
Michal Hochhauser & Ouriel Grynszpan. (2016) Methods Investigating How Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder Spontaneously Attend to Social Events. Review Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 4:1, pages 82-93.
Crossref
Kaitlin E.W. Laidlaw & Alan Kingstone. (2017) Fixations to the eyes aids in facial encoding; covertly attending to the eyes does not. Acta Psychologica 173, pages 55-65.
Crossref
Tobias Grossmann. (2017) The Eyes as Windows Into Other Minds. Perspectives on Psychological Science 12:1, pages 107-121.
Crossref
A. Kingstone, K.E.W. Laidlaw, E. Nasiopoulos & E.F. Risko. 2017. On Human Nature. On Human Nature 365 382 .
Frouke Hermens, Markus Bindemann & A. Mike Burton. (2015) Responding to social and symbolic extrafoveal cues: cue shape trumps biological relevance. Psychological Research 81:1, pages 24-42.
Crossref
K. E. W. Laidlaw, E. F. Risko & A. Kingstone. 2016. Shared Representations. Shared Representations 195 215 .
Alexandra Nikolaides, Susanne Miess, Isabella Auvera, Ralf Müller, Joachim Klosterkötter & Stephan Ruhrmann. (2016) Restricted attention to social cues in schizophrenia patients. European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience 266:7, pages 649-661.
Crossref
Carlo Fantoni, Sara Rigutti, Valentina Piccoli, Elena Sommacal & Andrea Carnaghi. (2016) Faster but Less Careful Prehension in Presence of High, Rather than Low, Social Status Attendees. PLOS ONE 11:6, pages e0158095.
Crossref
Charlotte J. W. Connell, Benjamin Thompson, Gustav Kuhn, Michael P. Claffey, Shelley Duncan & Nicholas Gant. (2016) Fatigue related impairments in oculomotor control are prevented by caffeine. Scientific Reports 6:1.
Crossref
Gustav Kuhn, Robert Teszka, Natalia Tenaw & Alan Kingstone. (2016) Don’t be fooled! Attentional responses to social cues in a face-to-face and video magic trick reveals greater top-down control for overt than covert attention. Cognition 146, pages 136-142.
Crossref
Mario Dalmaso, Luigi Castelli, Konstantinos Priftis, Marta Buccheri, Daniela Primon, Silvia Tronco & Giovanni Galfano. (2015) Space-based and object-centered gaze cuing of attention in right hemisphere-damaged patients. Frontiers in Psychology 6.
Crossref
Evan F. Risko & Alan Kingstone. 2015. The Cambridge Handbook of Applied Perception Research. The Cambridge Handbook of Applied Perception Research 466 487 .
Joseph D. Chisholm & Alan Kingstone. (2015) Action video game players' visual search advantage extends to biologically relevant stimuli. Acta Psychologica 159, pages 93-99.
Crossref
Adam Naples, Alyssa Nguyen-Phuc, Marika Coffman, Anna Kresse, Susan Faja, Raphael Bernier & James C. McPartland. (2014) A computer-generated animated face stimulus set for psychophysiological research. Behavior Research Methods 47:2, pages 562-570.
Crossref
Nicola Jean Gregory, Beatriz Lόpez, Gemma Graham, Paul Marshman, Sarah Bate & Niko Kargas. (2015) Reduced Gaze Following and Attention to Heads when Viewing a "Live" Social Scene. PLOS ONE 10:4, pages e0121792.
Crossref
L. E. Marsh, A. Pearson, D. Ropar & A. F. de C. Hamilton. (2014) Predictive Gaze During Observation of Irrational Actions in Adults with Autism Spectrum Conditions. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 45:1, pages 245-261.
Crossref
Jennifer C. Bush & Daniel P. Kennedy. 2015. The Many Faces of Social Attention. The Many Faces of Social Attention 179 220 .
James A. Solyst & Elizabeth A. Buffalo. (2014) Social relevance drives viewing behavior independent of low-level salience in rhesus macaques. Frontiers in Neuroscience 8.
Crossref
Nida Latif, Adriano V. Barbosa, Eric Vatiokiotis-Bateson, Monica S. Castelhano & K. G. Munhall. (2014) Movement Coordination during Conversation. PLoS ONE 9:8, pages e105036.
Crossref
David W.-L. Wu, Walter F. Bischof, Nicola C. Anderson, Tanya Jakobsen & Alan Kingstone. (2014) The influence of personality on social attention. Personality and Individual Differences 60, pages 25-29.
Crossref
Joseph D. Chisholm, Craig S. Chapman, Marvin Amm, Walter F. Bischof, Dan Smilek & Alan Kingstone. (2014) A Cognitive Ethology Study of First- and Third-Person Perspectives. PLoS ONE 9:3, pages e92696.
Crossref
Qian Qian, Yong Feng, Lin Shi & Feng Wang. 2014. Proceedings of International Conference on Soft Computing Techniques and Engineering Application. Proceedings of International Conference on Soft Computing Techniques and Engineering Application 553 559 .
Allyson Rice, P. Jonathon Phillips, Vaidehi Natu, Xiaobo An & Alice J. O’Toole. (2013) Unaware Person Recognition From the Body When Face Identification Fails. Psychological Science 24:11, pages 2235-2243.
Crossref
Nicola C. Anderson, Walter F. Bischof, Kaitlin E. W. Laidlaw, Evan F. Risko & Alan Kingstone. (2013) Recurrence quantification analysis of eye movements. Behavior Research Methods 45:3, pages 842-856.
Crossref
Tamami Nakano, Noriko Higashida & Shigeru Kitazawa. (2013) Facilitation of face recognition through the retino-tectal pathway. Neuropsychologia 51:10, pages 2043-2049.
Crossref
Elina Birmingham, Tamara Meixner, Grace Iarocci, Christopher Kanan, Daniel Smilek & James W. Tanaka. (2013) The Moving Window Technique: A Window Into Developmental Changes in Attention During Facial Emotion Recognition. Child Development 84:4, pages 1407-1424.
Crossref
Steve DiPaola, Caitlin Riebe & James T Enns. (2013) Following the Masters: Portrait Viewing and Appreciation is Guided by Selective Detail. Perception 42:6, pages 608-630.
Crossref
Sophie Marat, Anis Rahman, Denis Pellerin, Nathalie Guyader & Dominique Houzet. (2012) Improving Visual Saliency by Adding ‘Face Feature Map’ and ‘Center Bias’. Cognitive Computation 5:1, pages 63-75.
Crossref
Richard McFarland, Hettie Roebuck, Yin Yan, Bonaventura Majolo, Wu Li & Kun Guo. (2013) Social Interactions through the Eyes of Macaques and Humans. PLoS ONE 8:2, pages e56437.
Crossref
Nicole R. Zürcher, Nick Donnelly, Ophélie Rogier, Britt Russo, Loyse Hippolyte, Julie Hadwin, Eric Lemonnier & Nouchine Hadjikhani. (2013) It’s All in the Eyes: Subcortical and Cortical Activation during Grotesqueness Perception in Autism. PLoS ONE 8:1, pages e54313.
Crossref
Dylan D. Wagner, William M. Kelley & Todd F. Heatherton. (2011) Individual Differences in the Spontaneous Recruitment of Brain Regions Supporting Mental State Understanding When Viewing Natural Social Scenes. Cerebral Cortex 21:12, pages 2788-2796.
Crossref
Catherine Thompson & David Crundall. (2011) Scanning Behaviour in Natural Scenes is Influenced by a Preceding Unrelated Visual Search Task. Perception 40:11, pages 1335-1349.
Crossref
Nicola C. Anderson, Evan F. Risko & Alan Kingstone. (2011) Exploiting human sensitivity to gaze for tracking the eyes. Behavior Research Methods 43:3, pages 843-852.
Crossref
Tom Foulsham, Esther Walker & Alan Kingstone. (2011) The where, what and when of gaze allocation in the lab and the natural environment. Vision Research 51:17, pages 1920-1931.
Crossref
Kirsten A. Dalrymple, Elina Birmingham, Walter F. Bischof, Jason J.S. Barton & Alan Kingstone. (2011) Opening a window on attention: Documenting and simulating recovery from simultanagnosia. Cortex 47:7, pages 787-799.
Crossref
Kaitlin E. W. LaidlawTom Foulsham, Gustav Kuhn & Alan Kingstone. (2011) Potential social interactions are important to social attention. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108:14, pages 5548-5553.
Crossref
Mara Mather & Matthew R. Sutherland. (2011) Arousal-Biased Competition in Perception and Memory. Perspectives on Psychological Science 6:2, pages 114-133.
Crossref
Evan F. Risko & Alan Kingstone. (2010) Eyes wide shut: implied social presence, eye tracking and attention. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics 73:2, pages 291-296.
Crossref
Kirsten A. Dalrymple, Elina Birmingham, Walter F. Bischof, Jason J.S. Barton & Alan Kingstone. (2011) Experiencing simultanagnosia through windowed viewing of complex social scenes. Brain Research 1367, pages 265-277.
Crossref
Markus Bindemann. (2010) Scene and screen center bias early eye movements in scene viewing. Vision Research 50:23, pages 2577-2587.
Crossref
Tom Foulsham & Alan Kingstone. (2010) Asymmetries in the direction of saccades during perception of scenes and fractals: Effects of image type and image features. Vision Research 50:8, pages 779-795.
Crossref
Elina Birmingham, Walter F. Bischof & Alan Kingstone. (2009) Saliency does not account for fixations to eyes within social scenes. Vision Research 49:24, pages 2992-3000.
Crossref
Jan Zwickel & Hermann J. Müller. (2009) Eye Movements as a Means to Evaluate and Improve Robots. International Journal of Social Robotics 1:4, pages 357-366.
Crossref
A. Mike Burton & Markus Bindemann. (2009) The role of view in human face detection. Vision Research 49:15, pages 2026-2036.
Crossref
Elina Birmingham & Alan Kingstone. (2009) Human Social Attention. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1156:1, pages 118-140.
Crossref
Elina Birmingham & Alan Kingstone. 2009. Attention. Attention 309 320 .
Alan Kingstone, Daniel Smilek & John D. Eastwood. (2010) Cognitive Ethology: A new approach for studying human cognition. British Journal of Psychology 99:3, pages 317-340.
Crossref

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.