Guidance of eye-movements in image viewing is believed to be controlled by stimulus driven factors as well as viewer dependent higher level factors such as task and memory. It is currently debated what proportions these factors contribute to gaze guidance, and also how they vary over time after image onset. Overall, the unanimity regarding these issues is surprisingly low and there are results supporting both types of factors as being dominant in eye-movement control under certain conditions. We investigate how low, and high level factors influence eye guidance by manipulating contrast statistics on images from three different semantic categories and measure how this affects fixation selection. Our results show that the degree to which contr...
The main goal of the present thesis is to contribute to the study of overt visual attention under na...
AbstractAnalysis of the statistics of image features at observers’ gaze can provide insights into th...
When we look at a scene our scanning eye movements are not random [1]. Remarkably, different observe...
Guidance of eye-movements in image viewing is believed to be controlled by stimulus driven factors a...
Guidance of eye-movements in image viewing is believed to be controlled by stimulus driven factors a...
Growing evidence links eye movements and cognitive functioning, however there is debate concerning w...
The way we move our eyes when viewing a scene is not random, but is influenced by both bottom-up (lo...
While many current models of scene perception debate the relative roles of low- and highlevel factor...
Top-down influences on the guidance of the eyes are generally modeled as modulating influences on bo...
During free-viewing of natural scenes, eye movements are guided by bottom-up factors inherent to the...
AbstractWhat distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this qu...
AbstractDoes it matter what observers are looking at right now to determine where they will look nex...
Top-down influences on the guidance of the eyes are generally modeled as modulating influences on bo...
ran iffer d a on c e resea are in onsens e-drive e relat ate. Re ism th ationsh whether low-level fe...
Springer New York. ISSN : 1866-9956International audienceWhen looking at a scene, we frequently move...
The main goal of the present thesis is to contribute to the study of overt visual attention under na...
AbstractAnalysis of the statistics of image features at observers’ gaze can provide insights into th...
When we look at a scene our scanning eye movements are not random [1]. Remarkably, different observe...
Guidance of eye-movements in image viewing is believed to be controlled by stimulus driven factors a...
Guidance of eye-movements in image viewing is believed to be controlled by stimulus driven factors a...
Growing evidence links eye movements and cognitive functioning, however there is debate concerning w...
The way we move our eyes when viewing a scene is not random, but is influenced by both bottom-up (lo...
While many current models of scene perception debate the relative roles of low- and highlevel factor...
Top-down influences on the guidance of the eyes are generally modeled as modulating influences on bo...
During free-viewing of natural scenes, eye movements are guided by bottom-up factors inherent to the...
AbstractWhat distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this qu...
AbstractDoes it matter what observers are looking at right now to determine where they will look nex...
Top-down influences on the guidance of the eyes are generally modeled as modulating influences on bo...
ran iffer d a on c e resea are in onsens e-drive e relat ate. Re ism th ationsh whether low-level fe...
Springer New York. ISSN : 1866-9956International audienceWhen looking at a scene, we frequently move...
The main goal of the present thesis is to contribute to the study of overt visual attention under na...
AbstractAnalysis of the statistics of image features at observers’ gaze can provide insights into th...
When we look at a scene our scanning eye movements are not random [1]. Remarkably, different observe...