The present study aimed to investigate the impact of facial expression, gaze interaction, and gender on attention allocation, physiological arousal, facial muscle responses, and emotional experience in simulated social interactions. Participants viewed animated virtual characters varying in terms of gender, gaze interaction, and facial expression. We recorded facial EMG, fixation duration, pupil size, and subjective experience. Subject's rapid facial reactions (RFRs) differentiated more clearly between the character's happy and angry expression in the condition of mutual eye-to-eye contact. This finding provides evidence for the idea that RFRs are not simply motor responses, but part of an emotional reaction. Eye movement data showed that fixations were longer in response to both angry and neutral faces than to happy faces, thereby suggesting that attention is preferentially allocated to cues indicating potential threat during social interaction.
Most empirical evidence on attentional control is based on brief presentations of rather abstract stimuli. Results revealed indications for a dynamic interplay between bottom-up and top-down attentional mechanisms. Here we used a more naturalistic task to examine temporal signatures of attentional mechanisms on fine and coarse time scales. Subjects had to inspect digitized copies of 60 paintings, each shown for 40 s. We simultaneously measured oculomotor behavior and electrophysiological correlates of brain activity to compare early and late intervals (1) of inspection time of each picture (picture viewing) and (2) of the full experiment (time on task). For picture viewing, we found an increase in fixation duration and a decrease of saccadic amplitude while these parameters did not change with time on task. Furthermore, early in picture viewing we observed higher spatial and temporal similarity of gaze behavior. Analyzing electrical brain activity revealed changes in three components (C1, N1 and P2) of the eye fixation-related potential (EFRP); during picture viewing; no variation was obtained for the power in the frontal beta- and in the theta activity. Time on task analyses demonstrated no effects on the EFRP amplitudes but an increase of power in the frontal theta and beta band activity. Thus, behavioral and electrophysiological measures similarly show characteristic changes during picture viewing, indicating a shifting balance of its underlying (bottom-up and top-down) attentional mechanisms. Time on task also modulated top-down attention but probably represents a different attentional mechanism.
The distractor effect is an inhibition of saccades shortly after a sudden visual event. It has been explained both as an oculomotor reflex and as a manifestation of the orienting response. To clarify which explanation is more appropriate, we investigated a possible habituation of this effect. Visual and auditory distractors were presented at gaze-contingent intervals during the perception of meaningful pictures. Both reflexlike and modifiable components were present in the visual distractor effect, with latencies of about 110 and 180 ms, respectively. The influence of visual and auditory distractors on saccades preceded the earliest changes in cortical ERPs. Only for long-term habituation in the visual modality was a correlation with ERPs (N1) found.
Emotion regulation (ER) can be conceptualized as any process by which individuals modify their emotional experiences, expressions, and physiology (Gross, 1998). Individuals encounter situations every day in which they have to regulate emotions. To achieve this, people can choose from a variety of strategies: situation selection, situation modification,
For both patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and their next of kin (NOK), the maintenance of quality of life (QoL) and mental health is particularly important. First studies suggest significant discrepancies between QoL reports by patients and NOK, but little is known for advanced ALS stages. To address this issue, we screened 52 ALS patients in incomplete locked-in state (iLIS). Final results were obtained for 15 couples of iLIS patients and NOK. We assessed patients’ and NOK’s subjective QoL, depression and anxiety and NOK’s caregiver burden. Gaze controlled questionnaires allowed direct assessment of patients. Patients and NOK self-reported comparable, mostly moderate to high levels of QoL. Of note, NOK indicated stronger anxiety symptoms. Higher anxiety levels in NOK were associated with stronger caregiver burden and reduced QoL. No significant misjudgment of patient’s QoL by the NOK was evident, while patients overestimated NOK’s global QoL. However, NOK with severe caregiver burden and depression symptoms gave poorer estimations of patients’ QoL. This relationship is relevant, considering NOK’s impact on life critical treatment decisions. While the daily time NOK and patient spend together was positively correlated with NOK’s QoL and mental health, this was not reversely found for the patients. Our results suggest that NOK adapt less successfully to the disease and concomitant experience of loss and point to an urgent need for specialized psychosocial support. The findings emphasize the importance of direct psychological wellbeing assessment of both patients and NOK in clinical practice, enabled by eye-tracking technology for patients in iLIS.
First prototypes of bi‐directional OLED microdisplay devices that combine both display and camera functionality on a single CMOS chip (OLED‐on‐CMOS) have been designed. The major goal of this integration is to provide capabilities for eye‐tracking in see‐through HMDs to achieve gaze‐based human–display interaction, e.g., in augmented‐reality applications. The development of the prototype was accompanied by user studies with a simulated bi‐directional microdisplay consisting of a commercially available eye‐tracker and a see‐through HMD. These tests were aimed at providing basic minimum requirements in terms of temporal and spatial resolution of an eye‐tracker to be implemented within the prototype, as well as to evaluate ergonomics of an appropriate user‐interface design. A description of the current state of the hardware architecture and design aspects for bi‐directional OLED microdisplays are also presented.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.