Abstract

According to so-called saliency-based attention models, attention during free viewing of visual scenes is particularly allocated to physically salient image regions. In the present study, we assumed that social features in complex naturalistic scenes would be processed preferentially irrespective of their physical saliency. Therefore, we expected worse prediction of gazing behavior by saliency-based attention models when social information is present in the visual field. To test this hypothesis, participants freely viewed color photographs of complex naturalistic social (e.g., including heads, bodies) and non-social (e.g., including landscapes, objects) scenes while their eye movements were recorded. In agreement with our hypothesis, we found that social features (especially heads) were heavily prioritized during visual exploration. Correspondingly, the presence of social information weakened the influence of low-level saliency on gazing behavior. Importantly, this pattern was most pronounced for the earliest fixations indicating automatic attentional processes. These findings were further corroborated by a linear mixed model approach showing that social features (especially heads) add substantially to the prediction of fixations beyond physical saliency. Taken together, the current study indicates gazing behavior for naturalistic scenes to be better predicted by the interplay of social and physically salient features than by low-level saliency alone. These findings strongly challenge the generalizability of saliency-based attention models and demonstrate the importance of considering social influences when investigating the driving factors of human visual attention.

Highlights

  • Humans as social beings permanently face diverse forms of social interactions, which in turn require possessing a broad set of social functions

  • Several studies yielded support that humans have a tendency to direct their gaze to other persons

  • In the one-way ANOVA on the relative area-normalized sum of fixation density values with repeated measurements on the factor region of interest (ROI; head, body, area of lower saliency, area of higher saliency) for social scenes, we observed a significant main effect of regions of interest (ROIs) (F[3,90] = 570.63, ε = 0.41, p < 0.001, η2p = 0.95) indicating that heads were looked at the most, followed by bodies which were fixated more than areas of higher saliency which were in turn looked at more than areas of lower saliency

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Summary

Introduction

Humans as social beings permanently face diverse forms of social interactions, which in turn require possessing a broad set of social functions. Researchers started to seriously question the impoverished approach and began to use more complex stimuli such as photographs of naturalistic scenes containing people. In this context, several studies yielded support that humans have a tendency to direct their gaze to other persons (especially their heads and eyes; e.g., Smilek et al, 2006; Birmingham et al, 2007, 2008a,b, 2009a; Castelhano et al, 2007; FletcherWatson et al, 2008; Zwickel and Vo, 2010; see Kano and Tomonaga, 2011). There is a lack of studies which explicitly identified non-social scene aspects that are at least conspicuous (e.g., regarding low-level features) than depicted persons and directly compared to what degree people and such other locations receive attention

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