Explorative eye movements specifically target some parts of a scene while ignoring others. Here we investigate how local image structure - defined by spatial frequency contrast - and informative image content - defined by higher order image statistics - are weighted for the selection of fixation points. We measured eye movements of macaque monkeys freely viewing a set of natural and manipulated images outside a particular task. To probe the effect of scene content, we locally introduced patches of pink noise into natural images, and to probe the interaction with image structure, we altered the contrast of the noise. We found that fixations specifically targeted the natural image parts and spared the uninformative noise patches. However, bot...
Abstract. Early stages of visual processing may exploit the characteristic structure of natural visu...
What distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this question w...
What distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this question w...
Explorative eye movements specifically target some parts of a scene while ignoring others. Here we i...
Explorative eye movements specifically target some parts of a scene while ignoring others. Here we i...
AbstractExplorative eye movements specifically target some parts of a scene while ignoring others. H...
AbstractExplorative eye movements specifically target some parts of a scene while ignoring others. H...
Humans and other primates move their eyes several times per second to foveate at different location...
Humans and other primates move their eyes several times per second to foveate at different location...
AbstractHumans and other primates move their eyes several times per second to foveate at different l...
Abstract—The primate visual system actively selects visual information from the environment for deta...
During free-viewing of natural scenes, eye movements are guided by bottom-up factors inherent to the...
AbstractHumans and other primates move their eyes several times per second to foveate at different l...
During free-viewing of natural scenes, eye movements are guided by bottom-up factors inherent to the...
Early stages of visual processing may exploit the characteristic structure of natural visual stimuli...
Abstract. Early stages of visual processing may exploit the characteristic structure of natural visu...
What distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this question w...
What distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this question w...
Explorative eye movements specifically target some parts of a scene while ignoring others. Here we i...
Explorative eye movements specifically target some parts of a scene while ignoring others. Here we i...
AbstractExplorative eye movements specifically target some parts of a scene while ignoring others. H...
AbstractExplorative eye movements specifically target some parts of a scene while ignoring others. H...
Humans and other primates move their eyes several times per second to foveate at different location...
Humans and other primates move their eyes several times per second to foveate at different location...
AbstractHumans and other primates move their eyes several times per second to foveate at different l...
Abstract—The primate visual system actively selects visual information from the environment for deta...
During free-viewing of natural scenes, eye movements are guided by bottom-up factors inherent to the...
AbstractHumans and other primates move their eyes several times per second to foveate at different l...
During free-viewing of natural scenes, eye movements are guided by bottom-up factors inherent to the...
Early stages of visual processing may exploit the characteristic structure of natural visual stimuli...
Abstract. Early stages of visual processing may exploit the characteristic structure of natural visu...
What distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this question w...
What distinguishes the locations that we fixate from those that we do not? To answer this question w...