Abstract

BackgroundEvidence indicates that individuals with Williams syndrome (WS) exhibit atypical attentional characteristics when viewing faces. However, the dynamics of visual attention captured by faces remain unclear, especially when explicit attentional forces are present. To clarify this, we introduced a visual search paradigm and assessed how the relative strength of visual attention captured by a face and explicit attentional control changes as search progresses.MethodsParticipants (WS and controls) searched for a target (butterfly) within an array of distractors, which sometimes contained an upright face. We analyzed reaction time and location of the first fixation—which reflect the attentional profile at the initial stage—and fixation durations. These features represent aspects of attention at later stages of visual search. The strength of visual attention captured by faces and explicit attentional control (toward the butterfly) was characterized by the frequency of first fixations on a face or butterfly and on the duration of face or butterfly fixations.ResultsAlthough reaction time was longer in all groups when faces were present, and visual attention was not dominated by faces in any group during the initial stages of the search, when faces were present, attention to faces dominated in the WS group during the later search stages. Furthermore, for the WS group, reaction time correlated with eye-movement measures at different stages of searching such that longer reaction times were associated with longer face-fixations, specifically at the initial stage of searching. Moreover, longer reaction times were associated with longer face-fixations at the later stages of searching, while shorter reaction times were associated with longer butterfly fixations.ConclusionsThe relative strength of attention captured by faces in people with WS is not observed at the initial stage of searching but becomes dominant as the search progresses. Furthermore, although behavioral responses are associated with some aspects of eye movements, they are not as sensitive as eye-movement measurements themselves at detecting atypical attentional characteristics in people with WS.

Highlights

  • Evidence indicates that individuals with Williams syndrome (WS) exhibit atypical attentional characteristics when viewing faces

  • Gaze behavior As the aim of the current study was to gage the relative strengths of attention captured by a target-unrelated face and explicit attentional control toward a target butterfly during the initial and later stages of directed searches, we focused on only the face-present and target-present conditions

  • In conclusion, we have shown that the target-unrelated faces captured attention at the later stages of searching in individuals with WS

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Summary

Introduction

Evidence indicates that individuals with Williams syndrome (WS) exhibit atypical attentional characteristics when viewing faces. Riby and Hancock [10] used a free-viewing paradigm with eye tracking to demonstrate that people with WS pay more attention to faces in social scenes than do control groups (non-verbal ability-matched and chronologically age-matched) or those with autism spectrum disorder. Another free-viewing eye-tracking study showed that people with WS fixated faces in a scene longer than did typical controls matched for non-verbal ability [12]. People with WS appear to spend an unusually long time looking at faces, most likely because of problems disengaging attention

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