Abstract

In our previous studies we have shown that seeing another person “live” with a direct vs. averted gaze results in enhanced skin conductance responses (SCRs) indicating autonomic arousal and in greater relative left-sided frontal activity in the electroencephalography (asymmetry in the alpha-band power), associated with approach motivation. In our studies, however, the stimulus persons had a neutral expression. In real-life social interaction, eye contact is often associated with a smile, which is another signal of the sender's approach-related motivation. A smile could, therefore, enhance the affective-motivational responses to eye contact. In the present study, we investigated whether the facial expression (neutral vs. social smile) would modulate autonomic arousal and frontal EEG alpha-band asymmetry to seeing a direct vs. an averted gaze in faces presented “live” through a liquid crystal (LC) shutter. The results showed that the SCRs were greater for the direct than the averted gaze and that the effect of gaze direction was more pronounced for a smiling than a neutral face. However, in this study, gaze direction and facial expression did not affect the frontal EEG asymmetry, although, for gaze direction, we found a marginally significant correlation between the degree of an overall bias for asymmetric frontal activity and the degree to which direct gaze elicited stronger left-sided frontal activity than did averted gaze.

Highlights

  • Gaze targeted toward an object can be seen as an expression of interest, either positive or negative

  • skin conductance responses (SCRs) were significantly greater for the direct gaze in the smiling vs. neutral face t(18) = 4.88, p < 0.001, but for the averted gaze, this difference was only marginally significant, t(18) = 2.08, p = 0.052

  • We expected to observe greater arousal and greater relative leftsided frontal asymmetry to seeing a direct vs. an averted gaze, and we proposed that when a stimulus person was smiling instead of having a neutral expression, these effects would be enhanced

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Gaze targeted toward an object can be seen as an expression of interest, either positive or negative. When someone turns his or her gaze to me, I may decide to approach or avoid this person. For example, contempt while seeking eye contact, I may feel anxious and walk away, but if the face is happy, I am possibly inclined to approach the person looking at me. Facial expressions together with gaze direction convey information about the sender’s emotions and personal goals. The evidence concerning how gaze direction and facial expression interact during face processing is somewhat mixed

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call