gaze at
Moreover, their method requires a user to set up an additional target chart with nine calibration points and
gaze at
these calibration points for initial calibration, which requires considerable processing time and is inconvenient for the user.
In order to present emotional stimuli with direct or averted eye
gaze at
varying expression intensities in the present study, we had to construct the stimuli ourselves, using the procedures outlined above, because none currently existed.
In this way, Nazneen returns the
gaze at
the whites, subverting the looking paradigm which has traditionally repressed the subjectivity of the subaltern (hooks 1992).
They found variations within two of the four polymorphisms (naturally occurring mutations) in CNR1 correlated with a longer
gaze at
happy faces but not with faces showing disgust.
It’s perfectly natural to
gaze at
things you admire and you wouldn’t be the first man to get a thrill from a good butcher’s at a nice pert breast.
And then there’s the shadowed figure of the standing man at left, whose
gaze at
the oblique-angled painting of the saint with which we began counters the angle of our gaze.
Mary differs from Fanny in that she considers elegance superior to virtue (10) and therefore, not unlike the Bertram sisters, renders herself the object of the male
gaze at
every opportunity.
By contrast, the patients in the two poems cited above have lost their capacity to
gaze at
their doctors at all.
282) wherein the representation of looks and looking is effectivity collapsed “with a generalized function of the eye,” as in “its common formulaic presentation as ‘men
gaze at
women'”: as Craig Saper maintains, “It is too simple to ask what the gaze is, and it is too easy to point at it and say with certainty, ‘that’s it, that’s the gaze!'” (p.
In this scene Forster goes as far as he ever does in allowing his reader to join his heroine in a long, luxurious
gaze at
the male form.
No gaze is, therefore, a gaze in isolation, and every gaze is as much a
gaze at
the self as it is a
gaze at
another/an other.