Abstract

Previous studies have shown that humans have a left spatial attention bias in cognition and behaviour. However, whether there exists a leftward perception bias of gaze direction has not been investigated. To address this gap, we conducted three behavioural experiments using a forced-choice gaze direction judgment task. The point of subjective equality (PSE) was employed to measure whether there was a leftward perception bias of gaze direction, and if there was, whether this bias was modulated by face emotion. The results of experiment 1 showed that the PSE of fearful faces was significantly positive as compared to zero and this effect was not found in angry, happy, and neutral faces, indicating that participants were more likely to judge the gaze direction of fearful faces as directed to their left-side space, namely a leftward perception bias. With the response keys counterbalanced between participants, experiment 2a replicated the findings in experiment 1. To further investigate whether the gaze direction perception variation was contributed by emotional or low-level features of faces, experiment 2b and 3 used inverted faces and inverted eyes, respectively. The results revealed similar leftward perception biases of gaze direction in all types of faces, indicating that gaze direction perception was biased by emotional information in faces rather than low-level facial features. Overall, our study demonstrates that there a fear-specific leftward perception bias in processing gaze direction. These findings shed new light on the cerebral lateralization in humans.

Highlights

  • Previous studies have shown that humans have a left spatial attention bias in cognition and behaviour

  • The one-sample t tests showed that the point of subjective equality (PSE) for fearful faces was significantly positive relative to zero, t (41) = 3.644, p = 0.001, Cohen’s d = 0.562, indicating a left-sided bias in perception of gaze direction

  • The analysis of variance (ANOVA) showed that the main effect of emotion was significant, F(3,123) = 10.392, p < 0.001 ηp2 = 0.202

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Summary

Introduction

Previous studies have shown that humans have a left spatial attention bias in cognition and behaviour. Our study demonstrates that there a fear-specific leftward perception bias in processing gaze direction These findings shed new light on the cerebral lateralization in humans. Previous studies have revealed that humans tend to have a false belief of being directly looked at when the gaze direction is slightly diverted towards left or right. This bias interacts with face emotion in both a­ dults[11,12,13,14] and children 15.

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