Both low-level physical saliency and social information, as presented by human heads or bodies, are known to drive gaze behavior in free-viewing tasks. Researchers have previously made use of a great variety of face stimuli, ranging from photographs of real humans to schematic faces, frequently without systematically differentiating between the two. In the current study, we used a Generalized Linear Mixed Model (GLMM) approach to investigate to what extent schematic artificial faces can predict gaze when they are presented alone or in competition with real human faces. Relative differences in predictive power became apparent, while GLMMs suggest substantial effects for real and artificial faces in all conditions. Artificial faces were accor...
Most experimental protocols examining joint attention with the gaze cueing paradigm are "observation...
Even though it is generally agreed that face stimuli constitute a special class of stimuli, which ar...
peer reviewedWe compared the ability of angry and neutral faces to drive oculomotor behaviour as a t...
Both low-level physical saliency and social information, as presented by human heads or bodies, are ...
Under natural viewing conditions, human observers shift their gaze to allocate processing resources ...
Gaze is an important non-verbal cue involved in many facets of social interactions like communicatio...
Humans are remarkably adept at interpreting the gaze direction of other individuals in their surroun...
Previous studies of eye gaze have shown that when looking at images containing human faces, observer...
AbstractWe assessed the role of saliency in driving observers to fixate the eyes in social scenes. S...
Faces are an important and salient stimulus in our everyday life. They convey social information and...
How faces are recognized and detected has been the focus of an extensive corpus of research. As such...
Saliency-based models of visual attention postulate that, when a scene is freely viewed, attention i...
A preferential-looking paradigm was used to investigate how gaze is distributed in naturalistic scen...
The human face is central to our everyday social interactions. Recent studies have shown that while ...
In two experiments we examined whether the allocation of attention in natural scene viewing is influ...
Most experimental protocols examining joint attention with the gaze cueing paradigm are "observation...
Even though it is generally agreed that face stimuli constitute a special class of stimuli, which ar...
peer reviewedWe compared the ability of angry and neutral faces to drive oculomotor behaviour as a t...
Both low-level physical saliency and social information, as presented by human heads or bodies, are ...
Under natural viewing conditions, human observers shift their gaze to allocate processing resources ...
Gaze is an important non-verbal cue involved in many facets of social interactions like communicatio...
Humans are remarkably adept at interpreting the gaze direction of other individuals in their surroun...
Previous studies of eye gaze have shown that when looking at images containing human faces, observer...
AbstractWe assessed the role of saliency in driving observers to fixate the eyes in social scenes. S...
Faces are an important and salient stimulus in our everyday life. They convey social information and...
How faces are recognized and detected has been the focus of an extensive corpus of research. As such...
Saliency-based models of visual attention postulate that, when a scene is freely viewed, attention i...
A preferential-looking paradigm was used to investigate how gaze is distributed in naturalistic scen...
The human face is central to our everyday social interactions. Recent studies have shown that while ...
In two experiments we examined whether the allocation of attention in natural scene viewing is influ...
Most experimental protocols examining joint attention with the gaze cueing paradigm are "observation...
Even though it is generally agreed that face stimuli constitute a special class of stimuli, which ar...
peer reviewedWe compared the ability of angry and neutral faces to drive oculomotor behaviour as a t...