AbstractWe investigated whether young infants orient reliably towards more salient vs. less salient objects in a visual scene. Subjects were tested with stimuli presented on textured fields, one side showing a target stimulus (a ‘more salient’ or ‘less salient’ texture patch) and the other a background stimulus. Infants typically preferred the more salient, but not the less salient target. Their behaviour depended on the configuration of the background stimulus. In contrast, 3–4 year-old children always showed a preference for the target stimulus, regardless of the configuration of the background. We conclude that both saliency of a target stimulus and its context play a role in early texture segmentation
There is now general consensus that infants can use several different visual properties as the basis...
We investigated the possibility that a range of social stimuli capture the attention of 6-month-old ...
This study examined the contribution of visual salience to bottom-up attention orienting to faces in...
AbstractWe investigated whether young infants orient reliably towards more salient vs. less salient ...
The infant's visual system contains orientation-sensitive mechanisms from the first weeks of life. D...
How do infants segment objects from the complex visual environment? Investigations of figure-ground ...
Extracting the statistical regularities present in the environment is a central learning mechanism i...
The foci of visual attention were modeled as a function of perceptual salience, adult fixation locat...
This article presents an eye-tracking study using a novel combination of visual saliency maps and "a...
This study examines how salience and a center bias drive infants’ first fixation while looking at co...
This article presents an eye-tracking study using a novel combination of visual saliency maps and "a...
This article presents an eye-tracking study using a novel combination of visual saliency maps and “a...
The ability to actively select and attend to target items from a visually cluttered environment is e...
There is now general consensus that infants can use several different visual properties as the basis...
There is now general consensus that infants can use several different visual properties as the basis...
There is now general consensus that infants can use several different visual properties as the basis...
We investigated the possibility that a range of social stimuli capture the attention of 6-month-old ...
This study examined the contribution of visual salience to bottom-up attention orienting to faces in...
AbstractWe investigated whether young infants orient reliably towards more salient vs. less salient ...
The infant's visual system contains orientation-sensitive mechanisms from the first weeks of life. D...
How do infants segment objects from the complex visual environment? Investigations of figure-ground ...
Extracting the statistical regularities present in the environment is a central learning mechanism i...
The foci of visual attention were modeled as a function of perceptual salience, adult fixation locat...
This article presents an eye-tracking study using a novel combination of visual saliency maps and "a...
This study examines how salience and a center bias drive infants’ first fixation while looking at co...
This article presents an eye-tracking study using a novel combination of visual saliency maps and "a...
This article presents an eye-tracking study using a novel combination of visual saliency maps and “a...
The ability to actively select and attend to target items from a visually cluttered environment is e...
There is now general consensus that infants can use several different visual properties as the basis...
There is now general consensus that infants can use several different visual properties as the basis...
There is now general consensus that infants can use several different visual properties as the basis...
We investigated the possibility that a range of social stimuli capture the attention of 6-month-old ...
This study examined the contribution of visual salience to bottom-up attention orienting to faces in...