NoIn this paper, we investigate how controlled changes to image properties and orientation affect eye movements for repeated viewings of images of natural scenes. We make changes to images by manipulating low-level image content (such as luminance or chromaticity) and/or inverting the image. We measure the effects of these manipulations on human scanpaths (the spatial and chronological path of fixations), additionally comparing these effects to those predicted by a widely used saliency model (L. Itti & C. Koch, 2000). Firstly we find that repeated viewing of a natural image does not significantly modify the previously known repeatability (S. A. Brandt & L. W. Stark, 1997; D. Noton & L. Stark, 1971) of scanpaths. Secondly we find that manipu...
Since Treisman’s theory, it has been generally accepted that color is an elementary feature that gui...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Image distortions can attract attention away from the natural scene saliency (Redi et al., 2011). Pe...
The way we move our eyes when viewing a scene is not random, but is influenced by both bottom-up (lo...
What distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this question w...
When we look at a scene our scanning eye movements are not random [1]. Remarkably, different observe...
While many current models of scene perception debate the relative roles of low- and highlevel factor...
SummaryWhen we look at a scene our scanning eye movements are not random [1]. Remarkably, different ...
AbstractWhat distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this qu...
Saliency models of eye guidance during scene perception suggest that attention is drawn to visually ...
Recognition memory for fixated regions from briefly viewed full-screen natural images is examined. L...
It is generally accepted that salience affects eye movements in simple artificially created search d...
Humans perform frequent saccadic eye movements to collect visual information from the environment. T...
Guidance of eye-movements in image viewing is believed to be controlled by stimulus driven factors a...
We investigated how eye gaze patterns are implicated in the perception and memory of scenes. Firstly...
Since Treisman’s theory, it has been generally accepted that color is an elementary feature that gui...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Image distortions can attract attention away from the natural scene saliency (Redi et al., 2011). Pe...
The way we move our eyes when viewing a scene is not random, but is influenced by both bottom-up (lo...
What distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this question w...
When we look at a scene our scanning eye movements are not random [1]. Remarkably, different observe...
While many current models of scene perception debate the relative roles of low- and highlevel factor...
SummaryWhen we look at a scene our scanning eye movements are not random [1]. Remarkably, different ...
AbstractWhat distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this qu...
Saliency models of eye guidance during scene perception suggest that attention is drawn to visually ...
Recognition memory for fixated regions from briefly viewed full-screen natural images is examined. L...
It is generally accepted that salience affects eye movements in simple artificially created search d...
Humans perform frequent saccadic eye movements to collect visual information from the environment. T...
Guidance of eye-movements in image viewing is believed to be controlled by stimulus driven factors a...
We investigated how eye gaze patterns are implicated in the perception and memory of scenes. Firstly...
Since Treisman’s theory, it has been generally accepted that color is an elementary feature that gui...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Image distortions can attract attention away from the natural scene saliency (Redi et al., 2011). Pe...