Exploring Fixation Times During Emotional Decoding in Intimate Partner Violence Perpetrators: An Eye-Tracking Pilot Study
Carolina Sarrate-Costa, Marisol Lila, Luis Moya-Albiol, Ángel Romero-Martínez

TL;DR
This pilot study explores how eye-tracking fixation times relate to emotional decoding abilities in individuals who perpetrate intimate partner violence.
Contribution
The study introduces eye-tracking as a novel method to assess emotional decoding in intimate partner violence perpetrators.
Findings
Longer fixation times on facial regions correlated with better emotional decoding abilities in perpetrators.
Fixation times explained 20% of the variance in emotional decoding test scores.
The ad hoc emotional decoding test showed similar reliability to existing emotion recognition tools.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Deficits in emotion recognition abilities have been described as risk factors for intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetration. However, much of this research is based on self-reports or instruments that present limited psychometric properties. While current scientific literature supports the use of eye tracking to assess cognitive and emotional processes, including emotional decoding abilities, there is a gap in the scientific literature when it comes to measuring these processes in IPV perpetrators using eye tracking in an emotional decoding task. Hence, the aim of this study was to examine the association between fixation times via eye tracking and emotional decoding abilities in IPV perpetrators, controlling for potential confounding variables. Methods: To this end, an emotion recognition task was created using an eye tracker in a group of 52 IPV perpetrators.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntimate Partner and Family Violence · Stalking, Cyberstalking, and Harassment · Bullying, Victimization, and Aggression
