Andrew's Home Page
Research Interests
My interests include social cognition, action perception and attention, and my research has focussed on gaze perception (see review in Psychological Bulletin).
Using gaze and arrow cues to attention, I have been investigating sex differences and other individual differences in attention, and have also demonstrated that gaze-cues can operate in object-centred co-ordinates. Other projects involve how gaze-cues can affect our impressions of the people producing the cue, and of the objects they look at.
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Publications
Bayliss, A. P., Griffiths, D., & Tipper, S. P. (in press). Predictive gaze cues affect face evaluation: The effect of facial emotion. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology.
Bayliss, A. P., Frischen, A., Fenske, M. J., & Tipper, S. P. (2007). Affective evaluations of objects are influenced by observed gaze direction and emotional expression. Cognition, 104(3), 644-653. [pdf]
Frischen,
A., Bayliss, A. P., & Tipper, S. P. (2007). Gaze-cueing of
attention: Visual attention, social cognition and individual
differences. Psychological Bulletin, 133(4), 694-724. [pdf]
Bayliss, A. P. (2007). Mixed signals: Stimulus-response compatibility and car indicator lights configuration. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 21(5), 669-676. [pdf] [BBC]
Bayliss,
A. P., Paul, M. A., Cannon, P. R., & Tipper, S. P. (2006). Gaze
cueing and affective judgments of objects: I like what you look at. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 13(6), 1061-1066. [pdf].
Bayliss, A. P. & Tipper, S. P. (2006b). Predictive gaze cues and personality judgements: Should eye trust you? Psychological Science, 17(6), 514-520.
Bayliss, A. P. & Tipper, S. P. (2006a) Gaze cues evoke both spatial and object-centred shifts of attention. Perception and Psychophysics, 68(2), 310-318. [PDF]
Bayliss, A. P., di Pellegrino, G. & Tipper, S. P. (2005). Sex differences in eye gaze and symbolic cueing of attention. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 58A(4), 631-650. [PDF]
Bayliss, A. P. & Tipper, S. P. (2005). Gaze and arrow cueing of attention reveals individual differences along the autism-spectrum as a function of target context. British Journal of Psychology, 96(1), 95-114. [PDF]
Bayliss, A.
P., di Pellegrino, G. & Tipper, S. P. (2004). Orienting of attention
via observed eye-gaze is head-centred. Cognition 94(1), B1-B10. [PDF]
Click here for conference papers and posters etc...
Contact Details
School of Psychology,Adeilad Brigantia Building,
Penrallt Road,
University of Wales, Bangor,
Gwynedd, LL57 2AS
United Kingdom.
Tel: +44 (0) 1248 388367
email: a.bayliss@bangor.ac.uk