Various models have been proposed to explain the interplay between bottom-up and top-down mechanisms in driving saccades rapidly to one or a few isolated targets. We investigate this relationship using eye-tracking data from subjects viewing natural scenes to test attentional allocation to high-level objects within a mathematical decision-making framework. We show the existence of two distinct types of bottom-up saliency to objects within a visual scene, which disappear within a few fixations, and modification of this saliency by top-down influences. Our analysis reveals a subpopulation of early saccades, which are capable of accurately fixating salient targets after prior fixation within the same image. These data can be described quantita...
AbstractHuman observers take longer to re-direct gaze to a previously fixated location. Although the...
AbstractVisual processing and subsequent action are limited by the effectiveness of eye movement con...
Much effort has been made to explain eye guidance during natural scene viewing. However, a substanti...
Various models have been proposed to explain the interplay between bottom-up and top-down mechanisms...
AbstractDoes it matter what observers are looking at right now to determine where they will look nex...
AbstractA biologically motivated computational model of bottom-up visual selective attention was use...
Humans perceives the world by directing the center of gaze from one location to another via rapid ey...
AbstractWhat are the visual causes, rather than mere correlates, of attentional selection and how do...
AbstractNatural scenes are explored by combinations of saccadic eye movements and shifts of attentio...
AbstractRecent research [Parkhurst, D., Law, K., & Niebur, E., 2002. Modeling the role of salience i...
Recent research [Parkhurst, D., Law, K., & Niebur, E., 2002. Modeling the role of salience in the al...
During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in the environ...
While many current models of scene perception debate the relative roles of low- and highlevel factor...
AbstractAccurate saccadic programming in natural visual scenes requires a signal designating which o...
ran iffer d a on c e resea are in onsens e-drive e relat ate. Re ism th ationsh whether low-level fe...
AbstractHuman observers take longer to re-direct gaze to a previously fixated location. Although the...
AbstractVisual processing and subsequent action are limited by the effectiveness of eye movement con...
Much effort has been made to explain eye guidance during natural scene viewing. However, a substanti...
Various models have been proposed to explain the interplay between bottom-up and top-down mechanisms...
AbstractDoes it matter what observers are looking at right now to determine where they will look nex...
AbstractA biologically motivated computational model of bottom-up visual selective attention was use...
Humans perceives the world by directing the center of gaze from one location to another via rapid ey...
AbstractWhat are the visual causes, rather than mere correlates, of attentional selection and how do...
AbstractNatural scenes are explored by combinations of saccadic eye movements and shifts of attentio...
AbstractRecent research [Parkhurst, D., Law, K., & Niebur, E., 2002. Modeling the role of salience i...
Recent research [Parkhurst, D., Law, K., & Niebur, E., 2002. Modeling the role of salience in the al...
During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in the environ...
While many current models of scene perception debate the relative roles of low- and highlevel factor...
AbstractAccurate saccadic programming in natural visual scenes requires a signal designating which o...
ran iffer d a on c e resea are in onsens e-drive e relat ate. Re ism th ationsh whether low-level fe...
AbstractHuman observers take longer to re-direct gaze to a previously fixated location. Although the...
AbstractVisual processing and subsequent action are limited by the effectiveness of eye movement con...
Much effort has been made to explain eye guidance during natural scene viewing. However, a substanti...