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Paying attention to faces may be linked with psychopathology levels and ‘Big Five’ personality traits: Participants scoring high on extraversion, agreeableness, openness, and empathy fixated more on faces; those with high social anxiety, depression, and alexithymia focused less on faces

A person’s personality and psychopathology levels may be associated with how strongly they prefer to focus on human faces within images, according to a study published in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Marius Rubo from the University of Bern, Switzerland, and colleagues.

People tend to be drawn to other human faces when viewing images — even visually-busy images. Previous research points to personality factors or specific diagnoses potentially playing a role in how strongly specific individuals hold this preference for focusing on human faces. In this study, the authors assessed how several influential psychological traits might affect an individual’s preference to focus on faces.

120 participants (mostly students) viewed 20 photographs depicting people in busy environments while their attention was assessed. To do this, the authors used a cursor-based tool: the photographs were blurred and only became clear within a 20-pixel radius around the cursor, which participants could move around the photograph. Afterwards, the participants responded to a questionnaire assessing the “Big Five” personality traits of extraversion, agreeableness, openness, conscientiousness, and neuroticism. The questionnaires also asked about multiple facets of psychopathology including social anxiety, depression, empathy, alexithymia (inability to describe one’s emotions), and specific social values.

In terms of personality traits, extraversion, agreeableness and openness to experience were positively correlated with an increased focus on faces. Individuals who reported higher empathy levels were also more likely to focus more on faces. Meanwhile, participants who scored highly on certain other facets of psychopathology, including social anxiety, depression and alexithymia, tended to focus less on faces. In general, participants spent about 17 percent of their image viewing time looking at faces within the images.

The authors note that cursor positioning is an imperfect proxy for gaze tracking, being slower than direct gazing. They also note that attention to images of faces is partly different from attention in real life settings. However, the results suggest that face preferences may be linked both to personality and psychopathology levels.

The authors add: “Pictures of human faces attract most people’s attention, but the phenomenon is weaker in people with higher levels of social anxiety, depression and other forms of psychopathology.”

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