Federico Giovanni, Ferrante Donatella, Marcatto Francesco, Brandimonte Maria Antonella
IRCCS SDN, Naples, Italy.
Department of Life Science, University of Trieste, Trieste, Italy.
PeerJ. 2021 Apr 29;9:e11380. doi: 10.7717/peerj.11380. eCollection 2021.
Do we look at persons currently or previously affected by COVID-19 the same way as we do with healthy ones? In this eye-tracking study, we investigated how participants ( = 54) looked at faces of individuals presented as "COVID-19 Free", "Sick with COVID-19", or "Recovered from COVID-19". Results showed that participants tend to look at the eyes of COVID-19-free faces longer than at those of both COVID-19-related faces. Crucially, we also found an increase of visual attention for the mouth of the COVID-19-related faces, possibly due to the threatening characterisation of such area as a transmission vehicle for SARS-CoV-2. Thus, by detailing how people dynamically changed the way of looking at faces as a function of the perceived risk of contagion, we provide the first evidence in the literature about the impact of the pandemic on the most basic level of social interaction.
我们看待当前或曾经感染过新冠病毒的人与看待健康人的方式一样吗?在这项眼动追踪研究中,我们调查了54名参与者如何看待呈现为“未感染新冠病毒”、“感染新冠病毒”或“已从新冠病毒中康复”的个体的面部。结果显示,参与者注视未感染新冠病毒面部眼睛的时间比注视与新冠病毒相关的两类面部眼睛的时间更长。至关重要的是,我们还发现对与新冠病毒相关面部嘴巴的视觉注意力增加了,这可能是由于将该区域视为新冠病毒传播载体的威胁性特征。因此,通过详细说明人们如何根据感知到的传染风险动态改变面部注视方式,我们在文献中首次提供了有关疫情对最基本社会互动层面影响的证据。