Cognitive scientists have long proposed that social stimuli attract visual attention even when task irrelevant, but the consequences of this privileged status for memory are unknown. To address this, we combined computational approaches, eye-tracking methodology, and individual-differences measures. Participants searched for targets in scenes containing social or non-social distractors equated for low-level visual salience. Subsequent memory precision for target locations was tested. Individual differences in autistic traits and social anxiety were also measured. Eye-tracking revealed significantly more attentional capture to social compared to non-social distractors. Critically, memory precision for target locations was poorer for social scenes. This effect was moderated by social anxiety, with anxious individuals remembering target locations better under conditions of social distraction. These findings shed further light onto the privileged attentional status of social stimuli and its functional consequences on memory across individuals.
10.1016/j.cognition.2016.10.015
Journal article
Cognition
01/2017
158
215 - 223
Memory, Social anxiety, Social distraction, Visual attention, Adult, Attention, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Eye Movements, Female, Humans, Individuality, Male, Memory, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Phobia, Social, Photic Stimulation, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Reaction Time, Social Perception, Young Adult