Conscious and unconscious eye contact at the limits of vision

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Conscious and unconscious eye contact at the limits of vision

Authors

Lanfranco, R. C.; Guterstam, A.; Cleeremans, A.

Abstract

Eye contact is one of the most potent social signals, but it remains unclear how little visual input is sufficient to register direct gaze, and whether such registration requires conscious awareness. Here, we used a custom tachistoscope to present faces for only 1-5 ms, asking whether gaze direction can shape perception at the very limits of vision. Direct-gaze faces required less visual input to localise than averted-gaze faces and produced higher localisation sensitivity from 3 ms onwards. Crucially, this advantage emerged before participants could explicitly categorise gaze direction, and before perceptual awareness ratings showed metacognitive access to the information driving localisation, both of which appeared only at 4-5 ms. Information-theoretic analyses confirmed that localisation responses carried stimulus-location information before explicit reports and awareness ratings became informative. A second experiment showed that the earliest eye-contact advantage depended mainly on low spatial frequencies, indicating a role for coarse visual information. Finally, autistic traits were associated with a reduced localisation advantage for direct gaze. These findings show that eye contact can influence perceptual processing within just a few milliseconds, with less visual stimulation than is required for conscious access to gaze direction.

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