Abstract

It has been proposed that the orienting of attention in the same direction as another’s point of gaze relies on innate brain mechanisms which are present from birth, but direct evidence relating to the influence of eye gaze cues on attentional orienting in young children is limited. In two experiments, 137 children aged 3–10 years old performed an adapted pro-saccade task with centrally presented uninformative eye gaze, finger pointing and arrow pre-cues which were either congruent or incongruent with the direction of target presentations. When the central cue overlapped with presentation of the peripheral target (Experiment 1), children up to 5 years old had difficulty disengaging fixation from central fixation in order to saccade to the target. This effect was found to be particularly marked for eye gaze cues. When central cues were extinguished simultaneously with peripheral target onset (Experiment 2), this effect was greatly reduced. In both experiments finger pointing cues (image of pointing index finger presented at fixation) exerted a strong influence on saccade reaction time to the peripheral stimulus for the youngest group of children (<5 years). Overall the results suggest that although young children are strongly engaged by centrally presented eye gaze cues, the directional influence of such cues on overt attentional orienting is only present in older children, meaning that the effect is unlikely to be dependent upon an innate brain module. Instead, the results are consistent with the existence of stimulus–response associations which develop with age and environmental experience.

Highlights

  • Displaying a picture of a face or eyes looking to the left or right has been shown to facilitate an observer’s attention and saccadic eye movements in the direction which the actor’s eyes are looking

  • The results showed that finger pointing cues, rather than eye gaze cues, had the strongest influence on the youngest children’s saccadic reaction times (SRTs)

  • The results of the present study suggest that the effect of eye gaze and finger pointing cues on programming of eye movements develop along different trajectories in children under the age of 10 years

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Summary

Introduction

Displaying a picture of a face or eyes looking to the left or right has been shown to facilitate an observer’s attention and saccadic eye movements in the direction which the actor’s eyes are looking. It has been suggested that the gaze cueing effect is important for our understanding of the development of mechanisms underpinning social interaction, theory of mind and “mind-reading” abilities in humans (BaronCohen 1994) and that “reflexive” orienting in response to gaze direction cues constitutes evidence for the existence of an innate, hard-wired eye gaze direction detector module within the brain (Baron-Cohen 1995). If such an innate module exists, it would be expected that orienting of attention in response to eye gaze cues would be found from a very young age. When the face itself was laterally shifted, leaving the pupils in the same position, the infants’ attention was oriented in the direction of the moving face, not in the direction that the actor’s pupils were gazing

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