Pages that link to "Q51645615"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
The following pages link to Do the eyes have it? Cues to the direction of social attention (Q51645615):
Displaying 50 items.
- The importance of eyes: how infants interpret adult looking behavior. (Q24539156) (← links)
- Considerations for the composition of visual scene displays: potential contributions of information from visual and cognitive sciences (Q27023181) (← links)
- Joint attention without gaze following: human infants and their parents coordinate visual attention to objects through eye-hand coordination (Q27302760) (← links)
- The developmental origins of naïve psychology in infancy (Q28254618) (← links)
- Direct Speaker Gaze Promotes Trust in Truth-Ambiguous Statements. (Q28595583) (← links)
- Mechanisms underlying the social enhancement of vocal learning in songbirds (Q28601016) (← links)
- Embodied attention and word learning by toddlers (Q28661583) (← links)
- Of mice and monkeys: using non-human primate models to bridge mouse- and human-based investigations of autism spectrum disorders (Q28727722) (← links)
- The distributed human neural system for face perception (Q29619352) (← links)
- Growing up blind does not change the neural bases of Theory of Mind (Q30488714) (← links)
- Videos of conspecifics elicit interactive looking patterns and facial expressions in monkeys (Q30588834) (← links)
- Different but complementary roles of action and gaze in action observation priming: Insights from eye- and motion-tracking measures. (Q30647717) (← links)
- Human neural systems for face recognition and social communication (Q30670630) (← links)
- Humans are sensitive to attention control when predicting others' actions (Q30796686) (← links)
- Conceptualizing Social Attention in Developmental Research. (Q30826649) (← links)
- Anchoring gaze when categorizing faces' sex: evidence from eye-tracking data (Q33500478) (← links)
- Is it in the eyes? Dissociating the role of emotion and perceptual features of emotionally expressive faces in modulating orienting to eye gaze (Q33812228) (← links)
- Communicative knowledge pervasively influences sensorimotor computations (Q33842957) (← links)
- Cues for early social skills: direct gaze modulates newborns' recognition of talking faces (Q33883309) (← links)
- Social perception from visual cues: role of the STS region (Q33906227) (← links)
- Neural tuning for face wholes and parts in human fusiform gyrus revealed by FMRI adaptation (Q33995440) (← links)
- The eyes have it: the neuroethology, function and evolution of social gaze (Q34001567) (← links)
- Pupil dilation dynamics track attention to high-level information (Q34097077) (← links)
- Brain activation evoked by perception of gaze shifts: the influence of context (Q34161837) (← links)
- In the eye of the beholder: reduced threat-bias and increased gaze-imitation towards reward in relation to trait anger (Q34170873) (← links)
- Infants deploy selective attention to the mouth of a talking face when learning speech. (Q34252246) (← links)
- Biological motion cues trigger reflexive attentional orienting (Q34258748) (← links)
- A New Perspective on Embodied Social Attention (Q34314219) (← links)
- Diagnostic features of emotional expressions are processed preferentially (Q34359034) (← links)
- Mechanisms of eye gaze perception during infancy (Q34362507) (← links)
- A systematic review and meta-analysis of eye-tracking studies in children with autism spectrum disorders (Q34427545) (← links)
- Altercentric intrusions from multiple perspectives: beyond dyads (Q34601779) (← links)
- Direct look from a predator shortens the risk-assessment time by prey. (Q34765987) (← links)
- Visual attention in mixed-gender groups (Q34911952) (← links)
- Atypical neural networks for social orienting in autism spectrum disorders (Q34965499) (← links)
- Activation of frontoparietal attention networks by non-predictive gaze and arrow cues (Q35063673) (← links)
- Atypical integration of social cues for orienting to gaze direction in adults with autism (Q35084029) (← links)
- The complex duration perception of emotional faces: effects of face direction (Q35199147) (← links)
- Genetic influences on the neural basis of social cognition (Q35575210) (← links)
- The ability to follow eye gaze and its emergence during development in macaque monkeys (Q35584169) (← links)
- Neurodevelopmental changes of reading the mind in the eyes (Q35656748) (← links)
- Follow the sign! Top-down contingent attentional capture of masked arrow cues. (Q35674735) (← links)
- The role of social cues in the deployment of spatial attention: head-body relationships automatically activate directional spatial codes in a Simon task (Q35720017) (← links)
- The eyes are sufficient to produce a threat superiority effect (Q35752284) (← links)
- Why Robots Should Be Social: Enhancing Machine Learning through Social Human-Robot Interaction (Q35793586) (← links)
- Perceiving where another person is looking: the integration of head and body information in estimating another person's gaze (Q35796903) (← links)
- Point Me in the Right Direction: Same and Cross Category Visual Aftereffects to Directional Cues (Q35824453) (← links)
- Gaze Synchrony between Mothers with Mood Disorders and Their Infants: Maternal Emotion Dysregulation Matters (Q35866614) (← links)
- Space-based and object-centered gaze cuing of attention in right hemisphere-damaged patients (Q35912878) (← links)
- Gaze cueing of attention: visual attention, social cognition, and individual differences. (Q35945096) (← links)