Chen, MaggieKarlinsky, AprilWelsh, Timothy N.2022-10-242022-10-242020-10Chen, M., Karlinsky, A., Welsh T.N. (2020). Hand, but not foot, cues generate increases in salience at the pointed-at location. Acta Psychologica,210, 03165. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2020.103165http://hdl.handle.net/1807/124776This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Elsevier.One line of research has indicated that directional social cues, such as eye gaze and pointed fingers, increase the salience of spatial locations or objects in a relatively involuntary manner (social cueing effect). A separate line of research has indicated that the compatibility between the body part that is observed by an actor primes and facilitates responses with a similar body part more than a dissimilar body part (body-part compatibility effect). The present experiment investigated whether or not social cueing effects were modulated by the relationship between the responding effector and the body part observed as the cue. To this end, non-predictive directional hand or foot cues were presented 100 or 1000 ms prior to a target. On different blocks of trials, participants (n=19) executed discrete hand-button and foot-pedal responses to the location of a target to examine the influence of cue-effector body-part compatibility on social cueing effects. Response times (RTs) of hand and foot responses were shorter to cued targets than to uncued targets when hand cues were used. No cueing effects emerged when foot cues were used. The hand-only cueing effect emerged when either a hand or foot response was executed. These results suggest cueing effects are not modulated by the compatibility between limb used as the cue and effector, but rather they are determined by the body part used as the cue. Overall, the social relevance and learned use of a cue seem more pertinent than body-part matching of a stimulus type and response effector in social cueing.en-caAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internationalhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/body-part compatibilityeffector primingresponse timesocial cueHand, but not foot, cues generate increases in salience at the pointed-at locationArticle Post-Printhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2020.103165