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Visual spatial attention to sexual stimuli.

Authors :
Snowden, Robert J.
Kydd-Coutts, Megan
Varney, Ellie-May
Rosselli, Olivia
Gray, Nicola S.
Source :
Current Psychology; Sep2024, Vol. 43 Issue 34, p27930-27943, 14p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Visual events of high salience are thought to automatically attract visual processing resources to their location. Hence, we should expect that stimuli with sexual content should trigger such a movement of visual resources. However, evidence for such an allocation of visual resources is sparse and rather contradictory. In two studies we tested this hypothesis. Using a dot-probe task, Experiment 1 showed that targets occurring at the location of a briefly presented and uninformative cue (hence engaging "exogenous" attention) with sexual content were responded to more rapidly than those that occurred at the location of the neutral cue - thus confirming that sexual stimuli can attract automatic attention to their location. However, the effect was small and had a low level of reliability. No consistent gender differences were found. In Experiment 2, we examined whether this cueing effect remained even for low-visibility cues. No cueing effects were found, but the task manipulation also abolished the cueing effect for high visibility cues. While the study supports the notion of spatial allocation of visual resources to sexual stimuli, it highlights that this effect is not robust or reliable, and discusses the implications of this. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10461310
Volume :
43
Issue :
34
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Current Psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179814593
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-024-06438-y