Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5041151 | Brain and Cognition | 2017 | 8 Pages |
â¢PS, a case of pure acquired prosopagnosia (AP) processes the eyes abnormally.â¢We conducted the first study of gaze-cueing effect (GCE) in AP.â¢PS showed no GCE for short duration cues in facial context.â¢Holistic processing is required for rapid attentional deployment based on gaze cues.
Gaze-cueing is the automatic spatial orienting of attention in the direction of perceived gaze. Participants respond faster to targets located at positions congruent with the direction of gaze, compared to incongruent ones (gaze cueing effect, GCE). However, it still remains unclear whether its occurrence depends on intact integration of information from the entire eye region or face, rather than simply the presence of the eyes per se. To address this question, we investigated the GCE in PS, an extensively studied case of pure acquired prosopagnosia. In our gaze-cueing paradigm, we manipulated the duration at which cues were presented (70Â ms vs. 400Â ms) and the availability of facial information (full-face vs. eyes-only). For 70Â ms cue duration, we found a context-dependent dissociation between PS and controls: PS showed a GCE for eyes-only stimuli, whereas controls showed a GCE only for full-face stimuli. For 400Â ms cue duration, PS showed gaze-cueing independently of stimulus context, whereas in healthy controls a GCE again emerged only for full-face stimuli. Our findings suggest that attentional deployment based on the gaze direction of briefly presented faces requires intact processing of facial information, which affords salience to the eye region.