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Implied motion as a possible mechanism for encoding other people's attention
2020
Progress in Neurobiology
Recent evidence suggests that the human brain automatically constructs a rich model of other people's attention, beyond registering low-level cues such as someone else's gaze direction. This model is not a physically accurate representation of attention, but instead appears to contain simplifying and physically incoherent features. For example, without explicitly realizing it, people treat the attentive gaze of others as though it exerts a gentle force pushing on objects. Here we specify
doi:10.1016/j.pneurobio.2020.101797
pmid:32217129
fatcat:rrdpqezozfas7crdpguhxnycui