whether a pair of goggles that she/he is wearing is transparent or opaque, etc. Intriguingly, this latter prediction is motivated by the findings of Teufel et al. (2009), who reported that participants’ processing of gaze direction was facilitated when a subject believed that a person wearing goggles was able to see through them (as opposed to the goggles being opaque). In sum, the identification of a domain-general attentional process (spatial cueing) that is engaged in a social context raises important further questions about how that domain-general process functions in this specific context, and about what other domain-specific social-perceptual and social-cognitive processes may also be at work.